Publication Details

Category Data Publication
DOI 10.5281/zenodo.15275610
Licence creative commons licence
Title (Primary) Simulated spectral irradiances, radiances, and vegetation albedo obtained from coupling libRadtran and SCOPE2.0 (1.0) [Data set]
Author Wolf, K.; Jäkel, E.; Ehrlich, A.; Schäfer, M.; Feilhauer, H.; Huth, A.; Wendisch, M.
Source Titel Zenodo
Year 2025
Department OESA
Language englisch
Topic T5 Future Landscapes
Abstract This paper investigates the influence of clouds on vegetation albedo. For this purpose, we use coupled atmosphere–vegetation radiative transfer (RT) simulations combining the library for Radiative Transfer (libRadtran) and the vegetation Soil Canopy Observation of Photosynthesis and Energy fluxes (SCOPE2.0) model. Both models are iteratively linked to more realistically simulate cloud–vegetation–radiation interactions above three types of canopy, represented by the spherical, erectophile, and planophile leaf angle distributions. The coupled models are applied to simulate solar, spectral, and broadband irradiances under cloud-free and cloudy conditions, with the focus on the visible to near infrared wavelength range from 0.4 to 2.4 µm. The simulated irradiances are used to investigate the spectral and broadband effect of clouds on the vegetation albedo. Changes in solar zenith angle and cloud optical thickness are found to be equally important for variations in vegetation albedo.
The iterative coupling of both models showed especially that the albedo of canopies with an erectophile leaf angle distribution below optically thin clouds in combination with small solar zenith angles is overestimated when a fixed illumination is assumed. For solar zenith angles less than 50–60°, the vegetation albedo is increased by clouds by up to 0.1. The greatest increase in albedo is observed during the transition from cloud-free to cloudy conditions, with a cloud optical thickness (τ) in the range between 0 and 6. For higher values of τ, the albedo of the vegetation saturates and increases only slightly. The increase in vegetation albedo is a result of three effects that are quantified by the simulations: (i) dependence of the canopy reflectivity on the direct and diffuse fraction of downward irradiance, (ii) the shift in the weighting of downward irradiance due to scattering and absorption by clouds, and (iii) multiple scattering between the top of canopy and the cloud base. The observed change in vegetation albedo due to cloudiness is parameterized by a polynomial function, representing a potential method to include cloud–vegetation–radiation interactions in numerical weather prediction and global climate models.
linked UFZ text publications
Persistent UFZ Identifier https://www.ufz.de/index.php?en=20939&ufzPublicationIdentifier=31015
Wolf, K., Jäkel, E., Ehrlich, A., Schäfer, M., Feilhauer, H., Huth, A., Wendisch, M. (2025):
Simulated spectral irradiances, radiances, and vegetation albedo obtained from coupling libRadtran and SCOPE2.0 (1.0) [Data set]
Zenodo 10.5281/zenodo.15275610