Solar radiation is extremely useful in modelling many agricultural applications, but ishardly used due to the difficulty in obtaining data, and the time consuming process inestimating it by the Angstrom (1924) formula which uses world geographical relationships.To estimate solar radiation at the Coconut Research Institute, Lunuwila (7° 20' N; 71° 5 3 'E; 30.5 m ) an alternative model was developed from measured sunshine hours data only.The model had good fit (R2 = 0.90, P < 0.001) and was found to have agreement with theestimates obtained from the Angstrom model. The alternative model is more flexible anduseful in estimating crop evapotranspiration, and for crop-weather modelling. The mean dailysolar radiation at Lunuwila was estimated to be 18.3 MJ m"2d "' and .the total annual solarradiation receipts is 6680 MJ m'2 (66.8 TJ ha-1). The monthly solar radiation was highestin March (21.7 MJ m'2 d ' ) and the estimated 75% probability value was 22.5. June had thelowest (16.1 MJ m"2 d'1) value and the estimated 75% probability value was 17.8.
CITATION STYLE
PERIES, T. S. G., & THATTIL, R. O. (2010). AN “ALTERNATIVE” MODEL TO ESTIMATE SOLAR RADIATION. COCOS, 10, 27–34. https://doi.org/10.4038/cocos.v10i0.2135
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