Systematic errors in estimation of insolation by empirical formulas |
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Authors: | Shoichi Kizu |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Geophysics, Graduate School of Science, Tohoku University, Aoba-ku, 980-77 Sendai, Japan |
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Abstract: | Systematic errors in the estimation of surface, insolation,Q, by two popular empirical formulas are investigated statistically by using coincident measurements of the global solar radiation
and the total cloud cover at JMA observatories over Japan. The results show that Reed’s (1977) widely-accepted formula remarkably
overestimatesQ under overcast conditions. The overestimation is particularly evident in the summer months. The formula also overestimatesQ in cloud-free conditions, which may be due to an overestimation of the clear-sky transmittance by Seckel and Beaudry, (1973).
By contrast, Kondo and Miura’s (1985) formula underestimatesQ under overcast conditions, whereas it slightly overestimates in partially cloudy conditions. It is shown that these systematic
errors can explain some, of the published differences between the estimation ofQ by the two formulas. The users of these formulas should be careful since these cloudiness-dependent errors can contaminate
not only the absolute values but also the temporal anomalies or the spatial variability of the insolation, predicted by them.
In particular, it can be serious in regions of dense cloud cover such as the northern North Pacific, the northern North Atlantic
and the Southern Ocean. It is also shown that the ratio ofQ to the insolation at the top of the atmosphere,Q
TOA, takes on a range of values, particularly under dense cloud cover. This implies an inherent difficulty in estimation ofQ by a simple empirical formula utilizing only readily-available observables such as cloudiness. |
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Keywords: | Surface insolation empirical formula surface heat budget bulk formjla cloudiness cloud amount |
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