Dear Jonathan G and John G,

Thanks to both of you for your replies to the questions on land surface skin temperature. I do agree with Jonathan G's points and see how the land surface temperature is likely very similar in value to the surface (interface) temperature, but my opinion is that for consistency of names within the CF and to alleviate general confusion (e.g. the inevitable questions of why there is not a land surface skin temperature when there is one for the sea surface), its seems useful to add a standard name for land_surface_skin_temperature. I think having the analogue to the sea surface quantity is complementary. I realized, however, that my initial definition of land surface skin temperature was a little too specific in attempting to quantify the depth of the skin layer. My general impression is that the depth of the land skin layer is more variable and not as well quantified as the depth of the sea surface skin. Thus, I generalized the definition to emphasize that the skin temperature is a radiometric quantity and removed the reference to the skin depth. Here is my current proposal:

Standard Name:   land_surface_skin_temperature

Definition:The land surface skin temperature is the aggregate temperature of the "skin" of the land surface, where the "skin" is the upper boundary of the land which emits infrared radiation directly to space through the atmosphere.

Canonical Units:K


Any comments are appreciated.

Sincerely,

Jonathan Wrotny

On 6/17/2013 10:17 AM, John Graybeal wrote:
As I understand it, the reason for the introduction of the skin temperature 
(and other sea surface temperatures) is that originally sea_surface_temperature 
encompassed everything (in its 100 years of use) from a bucket somewhere in the 
first 10 meters, to a satellite measuring the first few millimeters. More 
precise names were needed.

I expect a similar situation applies on land. Even if past practice may only 
penetrate the service 10 centimeters, that's noticeably different than a 
satellite measuring a few millimeters.  If that's at all true, having the 
refined term makes sense to me.

John

On Jun 17, 2013, at 05:41, Jonathan Gregory <[email protected]> wrote:

Dear Jonathan and Jim

In my previous email, I was trying to explain why an interface temperature
is a physical meaningful concept, which Jonathan asked about. This is actually
an applicable concept in models, as I said, and it is the idea which I (at
least) had in mind when the name was put in the standard name table. Like CF
in general, the standard name table was originally created for the purpose of
model metadata, and was later to extended to observations. This quantity is an
idealisation, not an observable quantity.

The heat capacity of a layer 12 micrometers thick is so small that I suppose
there is practically no difference between the skin temperature and the
interface temperature, on the timescales you're interested in. Is that correct,
do you think? If so, it seems to me that it would be fine to use the existing
name of surface_temperature for this quantity. You propose the new name on the
analogy of the sea_surface_skin_temperature. The same argument would apply to
that as well. I can't remember the reason why it was thought necessary to make
a distinction between surface_temperature and sea_surface_skin_temperature,
though I do recall quite a lot of discussion about it.

It is also fine to introduce land_surface_skin_temperature as well, I would
say. The data-writer has a choice. They could use surface_temperature if that
is accurate enough, but if they wish to be more precise about what material
layer it applies to, the skin temperature names could be used.

Best wishes

Jonathan

13/06/17 13:20:03 house
On Fri, Jun 14, 2013 at 02:45:28PM -0400, Jonathan Wrotny wrote:
Date: Fri, 14 Jun 2013 14:45:28 -0400
From: Jonathan Wrotny <[email protected]>
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 5.1; rv:17.0) Gecko/20130509
Thunderbird/17.0.6
To: Jim Biard <[email protected]>
CC: "[email protected] List" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [CF-metadata] new standard name: land_surface_skin_temperature

Dear Jim,

Thanks for your comments.  They all make sense to me and I'm on
board with your suggested definition.  I'll just wait for others to
comment, if needed, then we can converge on a final definition.
Sincerely,

Jonathan

On 6/14/2013 2:11 PM, Jim Biard wrote:
Jonathan,

I still don't believe that the surface temperature concept that
Jonathan Gregory has ever been what people were intending when
they make the surface_temperature standard name, but I'll abide by
whatever folks decide.

On a different front, I don't think the definition of the standard
name should include statements about technology used (measured by
an infrared radiometer?).  The definition should speak only to the
measured quantity, without reference to the way in which you
happen to be measuring it.  Likewise, there is no need for the
statement regarding variability of the quantity.  Also, the
surface in this name is not the lower boundary of the atmosphere.
It is the upper boundary of the land.  An non-volatile object in a
hard vacuum has a surface skin temperature.

Given all that, I'd suggest this for your definition:

Standard Name: land_surface_skin_temperature

Definition: The land surface skin temperature is the aggregate
temperature of the "skin" of the land surface, which extends
vertically approximately 12 micrometers below the land surface.

If people really think it needs to be spelled out even further,
add the sentence "The land surface is the upper boundary of the
land."

Grace and peace,

Jim

Jim Biard
Research Scholar
Cooperative Institute for Climate and Satellites <http://www.cicsnc.org/>
Remote Sensing and Applications Division
National Climatic Data Center <http://www.ncdc.noaa.gov/>
151 Patton Ave, Asheville, NC 28801-5001

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
828-271-4900



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On Jun 14, 2013, at 1:54 PM, Jonathan Wrotny <[email protected]
<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Dear Jonathan Gregory,

Thanks for your reply...this certainly helps to clear things up
for me.  I now better understand the meaning of the
"surface_temperature" standard name with the temperature defined
by heat fluxes at an interface, and not based on an actual
medium.

This also makes it obvious to me that my proposed standard name
"land_surface_skin_temperature" does not currently exist within
CF and could serve as an analogue to
"sea_surface_skin_temperature."  To summarize, here is my
current proposal:

Standard Name:   land_surface_skin_temperature

Definition:The surface called "surface" means the lower boundary
of the atmosphere. The land surface skin temperature is the
temperature measured by an infrared radiometer, but measurements
from microwave radiometers operating at GHz wavelengths also
exist. It represents the aggregate temperature of the skin
surface where ?skin? means the surface medium viewed by a sensor
to a vertical depth of approximately 12 micrometers.

Measurements of this quantity are subject to a large potential
diurnal cycle which is primarily due to the balance between
heating during the day by solar radiation and continual cooling
from terrestrial (long-wave) radiation emitted by the skin
surface.

Canonical Units:K


Sincerely,

Jonathan Wrotny

On 6/14/2013 1:22 PM, Jonathan Gregory wrote:
Dear Jonathan

I defer to Roy about the various sea water temperature names.

It is physically meaningful to have a temperature which doesn't relate to any
material layer. If there is no matter associated with it, it must have zero
heat capacity, so the temperature is determined by requiring an exact balance
of heat fluxes. For this to be possible, the heat fluxes concerned must depend
on the temperature, which of course they generally do. Obviously this is an
idealisation, but a surface interface temperature of this kind really can
exist in a model, although it's not an observational quantity. A model can
obtain such a temperature by solving simultaneously for the heat fluxes that
are balanced at the interface.

Best wishes

Jonathan G
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