Litcius/Paper detail

Hourly potential evapotranspiration at 0.1° resolution for the global land surface from 1981-present

Michael Bliss Singer, Dagmawi Asfaw, Rafael Rosolem, Mark Cuthbert, Diego G. Miralles, David MacLeod, Edisson Quichimbo Miguitama, Katerina Michaelides

2021Scientific Data207 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Challenges exist for assessing the impacts of climate and climate change on the hydrological cycle on local and regional scales, and in turn on water resources, food, energy, and natural hazards. Potential evapotranspiration (PET) represents atmospheric demand for water, which is required at high spatial and temporal resolutions to compute actual evapotranspiration and thus close the water balance near the land surface for many such applications, but there are currently no available high-resolution datasets of PET. Here we develop an hourly PET dataset (hPET) for the global land surface at 0.1° spatial resolution, based on output from the recently developed ERA5-Land reanalysis dataset, over the period 1981 to present. We show how hPET compares to other available global PET datasets, over common spatiotemporal resolutions and time frames, with respect to spatial patterns of climatology and seasonal variations for selected humid and arid locations across the globe. We provide the data for users to employ for multiple applications to explore diurnal and seasonal variations in evaporative demand for water.

Topics & Concepts

EvapotranspirationEnvironmental scienceRemote sensingGeographyEcologyBiologyPlant Water Relations and Carbon DynamicsClimate variability and modelsSoil Moisture and Remote Sensing
Hourly potential evapotranspiration at 0.1° resolution for the global land surface from 1981-present | Litcius