A previous study (Suckling and Hay, 1976a) described a method for calculating hourly values of the direct and diffuse solar radiation for cloudless sky conditions. This paper presents an extension which incorporates the effects of clouds through the use of hourly values of cloud amount and type for up to four layers and hourly bright sunshine totals. The latter data provide a more accurate measure of the length of time the direct radiation of the sun is not attenuated by cloud. On an average, the cloud layer-sun- shine (CLS) model estimated daily total solar radiation at five Canadian locations to within ±15 per cent of the measured values. This was an improvement over an earlier model (Davies et al., 1975) based on cloud data alone, but the relative advantage, as well as the overall errors themselves, were diminished as the averaging period was increased to five and ten days. The CLS model has the addi-tional advantage of calculating the separate direct and diffuse components of the total solar radiation. © Taylor & Francis Group, LLC.
CITATION STYLE
Suckling, P. W., & Hay, J. E. (1977). A cloud layer-sunshine model for estimating direct, diffuse and total solar radiation. Atmosphere, 15(4), 194–207. https://doi.org/10.1080/00046973.1977.9648441
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