Diurnal Variation of Soil Heat Flux at an Antarctic Local Area during Warmer Months

Soil heat flux (G) is one term in the energy balance equation, and it can be particularly important in regions with arid, bare, or thinly vegetated soil surfaces. However, in remote areas such as the Antarctic, this measurement is not routinely performed. The analysis of observational data collected...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Applied and Environmental Soil Science
Main Authors: Marco Alves, Jacyra Soares
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Hindawi Limited 2016
Subjects:
geo
Eta
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1155/2016/1769203
https://doaj.org/article/86f5fee621ab4d878e3f4e1638d69580
Description
Summary:Soil heat flux (G) is one term in the energy balance equation, and it can be particularly important in regions with arid, bare, or thinly vegetated soil surfaces. However, in remote areas such as the Antarctic, this measurement is not routinely performed. The analysis of observational data collected by the ETA Project at the Brazilian Antarctic Station from December 2013 to March 2014 showed that, for the total daily energy flux, the surface soil flux heats the deeper soil layers during December and January and G acts as a heat source to the outer soil layers during February and March. With regard to daytime energy flux, G acts as a source of heat to the deeper layers. During the night-time, the soil is a heat source to the shallower soil layers and represents at least 29% of the net night-time radiation. A relatively simple method—the objective hysteresis method (OHM)—was successfully applied to determine the surface soil heat flux using net radiation observations. A priori, the OHM coefficients obtained in this study may only be used for short-time parameterizations and for filling data gaps at this specific site.