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Using Enhanced Grace Water Storage Data to Improve Drought Detection by the U.S. and North American Drought Monitors

Authors :
Houborg, Rasmus
Rodell, Matthew
Lawrimore, Jay
Li, Bailing
Reichle, Rolf
Heim, Richard
Rosencrans, Matthew
Tinker, Rich
Famiglietti, James S
Svoboda, Mark
Wardlow, Brian
Zaitchik, Benjamin F
Publication Year :
2011
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 2011.

Abstract

NASA's Gravity Recovery and Climate Experiment (GRACE) satellites measure time variations of the Earth's gravity field enabling reliable detection of spatio-temporal variations in total terrestrial water storage (TWS), including groundwater. The U.S. and North American Drought Monitors rely heavily on precipitation indices and do not currently incorporate systematic observations of deep soil moisture and groundwater storage conditions. Thus GRACE has great potential to improve the Drought Monitors by filling this observational gap. GRACE TWS data were assimilating into the Catchment Land Surface Model using an ensemble Kalman smoother enabling spatial and temporal downscaling and vertical decomposition into soil moisture and groundwater components. The Drought Monitors combine several short- and long-term drought indicators expressed in percentiles as a reference to their historical frequency of occurrence. To be consistent, we generated a climatology of estimated soil moisture and ground water based on a 60-year Catchment model simulation, which was used to convert seven years of GRACE assimilated fields into drought indicator percentiles. At this stage we provide a preliminary evaluation of the GRACE assimilated moisture and indicator fields.

Subjects

Subjects :
Meteorology And Climatology

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.20110015257
Document Type :
Report