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Dive into the research topics where Tim Wilson is active.

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Featured researches published by Tim Wilson.


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2013

U.S. Climate Reference Network Soil Moisture and Temperature Observations

Jesse E. Bell; Michael A. Palecki; C. Bruce Baker; William G. Collins; Jay H. Lawrimore; Ronald D. Leeper; Mark E. Hall; John Kochendorfer; Tilden P. Meyers; Tim Wilson; Howard J. Diamond

AbstractThe U.S. Climate Reference Network (USCRN) is a network of climate-monitoring stations maintained and operated by the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) to provide climate-science-quality measurements of air temperature and precipitation. The stations in the network were designed to be extensible to other missions, and the National Integrated Drought Information System program determined that the USCRN could be augmented to provide observations that are more drought relevant. To increase the network’s capability of monitoring soil processes and drought, soil observations were added to USCRN instrumentation. In 2011, the USCRN team completed at each USCRN station in the conterminous United States the installation of triplicate-configuration soil moisture and soil temperature probes at five standards depths (5, 10, 20, 50, and 100 cm) as prescribed by the World Meteorological Organization; in addition, the project included the installation of a relative humidity sensor at each of...


Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2010

Application of the Priestley-Taylor approach in a two-source surface energy balance model.

Nurit Agam; William P. Kustas; Martha C. Anderson; John M. Norman; Paul D. Colaizzi; Terry A. Howell; John H. Prueger; Tilden P. Meyers; Tim Wilson

The Priestley‐Taylor (PT) approximation for computing evapotranspiration was initially developed for conditions of a horizontally uniform saturated surface sufficiently extended to obviate any significant advection of energy. Nevertheless, the PT approach has been effectively implemented within the framework of a thermal-based two-source model (TSM) of the surface energy balance, yielding reasonable latent heat flux estimates over a range in vegetative cover and climate conditions. In the TSM, however, the PT approach is applied only to the canopy component of the latent heat flux, which may behave more conservatively than the bulk (soil 1 canopy) system. The objective of this research is to investigate the response of the canopy and bulk PT parameters to varying leaf area index (LAI) and vapor pressure deficit (VPD) in both natural and agricultural vegetated systems, to better understand the utility and limitations of this approximation within the context of the TSM. Micrometeorological flux measurements collected at multiple sites under a wide range of atmospheric conditions were used to implement an optimization scheme, assessing the value of the PT parameter for best performance of the TSM. Overall, the findings suggest that within the context of the TSM, the optimal canopy PT coefficient for agricultural crops appears to have a fairly conservative value of ;1.2 except when under very high vapor pressure deficit (VPD) conditions, when its value increases. For natural vegetation (primarily grasslands), the optimal canopy PT coefficient assumed lower values on average (;0.9) and dropped even further at high values of VPD. This analysis provides some insight as to why the PT approach, initially developed for regional estimates of potential evapotranspiration, can be used successfully in the TSM scheme to yield reliable heat flux estimates over a variety of land cover types.


ORNL DAAC | 1999

BOREAS TE-06 1994 Soil and Air Temperatures in the NSA

Forrest G. Hall; Shelaine Curd; John M. Norman; Tim Wilson

The BOREAS TE-6 team collected several data sets to examine the influence of vegetation, climate, and their interactions on the major carbon fluxes for boreal forest species. This data set contains measurements of the air temperature at a single height and soil temperature at several depths in the NSA from 25-May to 08-Oct- 1994. Chromel-Constantan thermocouple wires run by a miniprogrammable data logger (Model 21X, Campbell Scientific, Inc., Logan, UT) provided direct measurements of temperature. The data are stored in tabular ASCII files. The data files are available on a CD-ROM (see document number 20010000884), or from the Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL) Distrobuted Activity Archive Center (DAAC).


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2009

The MODIS (Collection V005) BRDF/albedo product: Assessment of spatial representativeness over forested landscapes

Miguel O. Román; Crystal B. Schaaf; Curtis E. Woodcock; Alan H. Strahler; Xiaoyuan Yang; Rob H. Braswell; Peter S. Curtis; Kenneth J. Davis; Danilo Dragoni; Michael L. Goulden; Lianhong Gu; David Y. Hollinger; Thomas E. Kolb; Tilden P. Meyers; J. William Munger; Jeffrey L. Privette; Andrew D. Richardson; Tim Wilson; Steven C. Wofsy


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2007

Determining vegetation indices from solar and photosynthetically active radiation fluxes

Tim Wilson; Tilden P. Meyers


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2009

Intercomparison of a 'bottom-up' and 'top-down' modeling paradigm for estimating carbon and energy fluxes over a variety of vegetative regimes across the U.S.

Rasmus Houborg; Martha C. Anderson; John M. Norman; Tim Wilson; Tilden P. Meyers


Vadose Zone Journal | 2015

Evaluation of the 2012 Drought with a Newly Established National Soil Monitoring Network

Jesse E. Bell; Ronald D. Leeper; Michael A. Palecki; Evan J. Coopersmith; Tim Wilson; Rocky Bilotta; Scott Embler


Agricultural and Forest Meteorology | 2012

The effect of soil surface litter residue on energy and carbon fluxes in a deciduous forest

Tim Wilson; Tilden P. Meyers; John Kochendorfer; Martha C. Anderson; Mark Heuer


Vadose Zone Journal | 2016

Site-Specific Soil Properties of the US Climate Reference Network Soil Moisture

Tim Wilson; C. Bruce Baker; Tilden P. Meyers; John Kochendorfer; Mark Hall; Jesse E. Bell; Howard J. Diamond; Michael A. Palecki


Archive | 2015

Evaluation of the 2012 Droughtwith a Newly EstablishedNational Soil Monitoring Network

Jesse E. Bell; Ronald D. Leeper; Michael A. Palecki; Evan J. Coopersmith; Tim Wilson; Rocky Bilotta; Scott Embler

Collaboration


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Tilden P. Meyers

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Jesse E. Bell

North Carolina State University

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John M. Norman

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Martha C. Anderson

Agricultural Research Service

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John Kochendorfer

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Michael A. Palecki

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Ronald D. Leeper

North Carolina State University

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C. Bruce Baker

Oak Ridge National Laboratory

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Evan J. Coopersmith

Agricultural Research Service

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Rocky Bilotta

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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