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Title: Implementation of a semiphysical model for examining solar radiation in the midwest

Journal Article · · Journal of Applied Meteorology
 [1];  [2];  [1]
  1. Illinois State Water Survey, Champaign, IL (United States)
  2. Univ. of Oklahoma, Normal, OK (United States)

A semiphysical solar radiation (SR) model is implemented to generate a new historical daily SR database for 53 locations in nine Midwestern and six adjacent states (available from the Midwestern Climate Center). This model estimates daily SR using standard hourly meteorological observations (surface atmospheric pressure and dewpoint temperature; cloud height and fractional sky cover by layer) as well as time of day, day of year, latitude/longitude, and the daily presence/absence of snow cover as input. Because of an extensive effort to interpolate for missing input (especially cloud) data, the daily SR dataset generated is 92% complete for all 53 stations for 1948-91, and 99% complete for the 43 stations with continuous hourly meteorological observations that commenced during 1945-50 and extended through 1991. Consistent with previous work, the model validates favorably against sets of daily SR measurements from (three) contrasting parts of the study region, and so its output is used here without adjustment. Analyses of the dataset document the basic Midwestern spatial and temporal SR variability since the mid to late 1940s. The spatial variation of calendar monthly mean SR is dominated by a near-meridional (north-eastward) decrease in fall and winter. This fundamental pattern is substantially perturbed from midspring through summer by subregional-to-mesoscale variability around and across the Great Lakes. Time series of individual monthly station mean SR values exhibit a pronounced, regionwide 1945-91 downtrend for August-November. This decline is strongest ({approximately}12%) and most statistically significant (>99% level) for October in a belt extending east-southeastward from west-central Wisconsin across southern Lake Michigan and western Lake Erie to western Pennsylvania. The SR trends for December-July are largely positive but of lesser spatial coherence, temporal consistency, and statistical significance. 39 refs., 4 figs., 2 tabs.

Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE
OSTI ID:
273974
Journal Information:
Journal of Applied Meteorology, Vol. 34, Issue 9; Other Information: PBD: Sep 1995
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English