Theory of evapotranspiration 2. Soil and intercepted water evaporation

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Abstract

Evaporation of water from the soil is described and quantified. Formation of the soil dry surface layer is quantitatively described, as a process resulting from the difference between the evaporation and upward soil water flux to the soil evaporating level. The results of evaporation analysis are generalized even for the case of water evaporation from the soil under canopy and interaction between evaporation rate and canopy transpiration is accounted for. Relationships describing évapotranspiration increase due to evaporation of the water intercepted by canopy are presented. Indirect methods of evapotranspiration estimation are discussed, based on the measured temperature profiles and of the air humidity, as well as of the net radiation and the soil heat fluxes.

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Budagovskyi, A. I., & Novaḱ, V. (2011). Theory of evapotranspiration 2. Soil and intercepted water evaporation. Journal of Hydrology and Hydromechanics, 59(2), 73–84. https://doi.org/10.2478/v10098-011-0006-8

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