CHILI ist ein Ersatz für die Auswirkungen von Sonneneinstrahlung und topografischer Beschattung auf die Evapotranspiration. Dazu wird die Sonneneinstrahlung am frühen Nachmittag berechnet, wobei die Sonnenhöhe dem Äquinoktium entspricht. Es basiert auf dem 10‑m-NED-DEM des USGS (in EE als USGS/NED verfügbar).
Die Datasets „Ecologically Relevant Geomorphology“ (ERGo) von Conservation Science Partners (CSP), „Landforms“ und „Physiography“ enthalten detaillierte, mehrskalige Daten zu Landformen und physiografischen (auch als Landfacetten bezeichneten) Mustern. Obwohl diese Daten viele potenzielle Verwendungsmöglichkeiten haben, war der ursprüngliche Zweck, eine ökologisch relevante Klassifizierung und Karte von Landformen und physiografischen Klassen zu entwickeln, die für die Planung der Klimaanpassung geeignet sind. Da zukünftige Klimabedingungen mit großer Unsicherheit behaftet sind und die ökologischen Reaktionen noch unsicherer sind, bietet die Bereitstellung von Informationen darüber, was sich wahrscheinlich nicht ändern wird, eine solide Grundlage für die Entwicklung robuster Klimaanpassungspläne. Die Quantifizierung dieser Landschaftsmerkmale hängt von der Auflösung ab. Daher stellen wir die höchstmögliche Auflösung bereit, die angesichts des Umfangs und der Merkmale eines bestimmten Index möglich ist.
Bänder
Pixelgröße 10 Meter
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Aus NED abgeleiteter CHILI-Index von 0 (sehr kühl) bis 255 (sehr warm). Diese wurde aus dem Bereich [0,1] in der Publikation neu skaliert.
Theobald, D. M., Harrison-Atlas, D., Monahan, W. B., & Albano, C. M.
(2015). Ökologisch relevante Karten von Landformen und physiografischer Vielfalt für die Planung der Klimaanpassung. PloS one, 10(12),
e0143619
CHILI ist ein Ersatz für die Auswirkungen von Sonneneinstrahlung und topografischer Beschattung auf die Evapotranspiration. Dazu wird die Sonneneinstrahlung am frühen Nachmittag berechnet, wobei die Sonnenhöhe der Tagundnachtgleiche entspricht. Es basiert auf dem 10‑m-NED-DEM des USGS (in EE als USGS/NED verfügbar). Die Datasets „Ecologically Relevant Geomorphology (ERGo)“ von Conservation Science Partners (CSP), Landforms …
[null,null,[],[[["\u003cp\u003eThe CHILI dataset provides a heat-insolation load index derived from the USGS's 10m NED DEM, representing the effects of insolation and topographic shading on evapotranspiration.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eDeveloped by Conservation Science Partners, CHILI is part of the Ecologically Relevant Geomorphology (ERGo) datasets, focusing on landforms and physiographic patterns for climate adaptation planning.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eThe dataset covers the United States and is available at a 10-meter resolution, with values ranging from 0 (very cool) to 255 (very warm).\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eCHILI is based on insolation calculations at early afternoon, simulating sun altitude equivalent to equinox.\u003c/p\u003e\n"],["\u003cp\u003eThis dataset is licensed under CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0 and is available for use in Google Earth Engine.\u003c/p\u003e\n"]]],["The dataset, available from 2006-01-24 to 2011-05-13, provided by Conservation Science Partners, contains the CHILI index, a measure of insolation and topographic shading effects on evapotranspiration. This index, derived from USGS's 10m NED DEM, is part of the ERGo Datasets. Key data points are landforms and physiographic patterns useful for climate adaptation planning. The index is rescaled from the \\[0,1] to \\[0,255] range. The data can be accessed via Earth Engine.\n"],null,["# US NED CHILI (Continuous Heat-Insolation Load Index)\n\nDataset Availability\n: 2006-01-24T00:00:00Z--2011-05-13T00:00:00Z\n\nDataset Provider\n:\n\n\n [Conservation Science Partners](https://www.csp-inc.org/)\n\nTags\n:\n[aspect](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/aspect) [csp](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/csp) [elevation](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/elevation) [elevation-topography](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/elevation-topography) [ergo](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/ergo) [geophysical](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/geophysical) [landforms](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/landforms) [slope](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/slope) [topography](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/topography) [us](/earth-engine/datasets/tags/us) \n\n#### Description\n\nCHILI is a surrogate for effects of insolation and topographic shading on\nevapotranspiration represented by calculating insolation at early afternoon,\nsun altitude equivalent to equinox. It is based on the USGS's 10m NED DEM\n(available in EE as USGS/NED).\n\nThe Conservation Science Partners (CSP) Ecologically Relevant Geomorphology\n(ERGo) Datasets, Landforms and Physiography contain detailed, multi-scale\ndata on landforms and physiographic (aka land facet) patterns. Although\nthere are many potential uses of these data, the original purpose for these\ndata was to develop an ecologically relevant classification and map of\nlandforms and physiographic classes that are suitable for climate adaptation\nplanning. Because there is large uncertainty associated with future climate\nconditions and even more uncertainty around ecological responses, providing\ninformation about what is unlikely to change offers a strong foundation for\nmanagers to build robust climate adaptation plans. The quantification of\nthese features of the landscape is sensitive to the resolution, so we\nprovide the highest resolution possible given the extent and characteristics\nof a given index.\n\n### Bands\n\n\n**Pixel Size**\n\n10 meters\n\n**Bands**\n\n| Name | Min | Max | Pixel Size | Description |\n|------------|-----|-----|------------|-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------|\n| `constant` | 0 | 255 | meters | NED-derived CHILI index ranging from 0 (very cool) to 255 (very warm). This was rescaled from the \\[0,1\\] range in the publication. |\n\n### Terms of Use\n\n**Terms of Use**\n\n[CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0](https://spdx.org/licenses/CC-BY-NC-SA-4.0.html)\n\n### Citations\n\nCitations:\n\n- Theobald, D. M., Harrison-Atlas, D., Monahan, W. B., \\& Albano, C. M.\n (2015). Ecologically-relevant maps of landforms and physiographic diversity\n for climate adaptation planning. PloS one, 10(12),\n [e0143619](https://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0143619)\n\n### Explore with Earth Engine\n\n| **Important:** Earth Engine is a platform for petabyte-scale scientific analysis and visualization of geospatial datasets, both for public benefit and for business and government users. Earth Engine is free to use for research, education, and nonprofit use. To get started, please [register for Earth Engine access.](https://console.cloud.google.com/earth-engine)\n\n### Code Editor (JavaScript)\n\n```javascript\nvar dataset = ee.Image('CSP/ERGo/1_0/US/CHILI');\nvar usChili = dataset.select('constant');\nvar usChiliVis = {\n min: 0.0,\n max: 255.0,\n};\nMap.setCenter(-105.8636, 40.3439, 11);\nMap.addLayer(usChili, usChiliVis, 'US CHILI');\n```\n[Open in Code Editor](https://code.earthengine.google.com/?scriptPath=Examples:Datasets/CSP/CSP_ERGo_1_0_US_CHILI) \n[US NED CHILI (Continuous Heat-Insolation Load Index)](/earth-engine/datasets/catalog/CSP_ERGo_1_0_US_CHILI) \nCHILI is a surrogate for effects of insolation and topographic shading on evapotranspiration represented by calculating insolation at early afternoon, sun altitude equivalent to equinox. It is based on the USGS's 10m NED DEM (available in EE as USGS/NED). The Conservation Science Partners (CSP) Ecologically Relevant Geomorphology (ERGo) Datasets, Landforms ... \nCSP/ERGo/1_0/US/CHILI, aspect,csp,elevation,elevation-topography,ergo,geophysical,landforms,slope,topography,us \n2006-01-24T00:00:00Z/2011-05-13T00:00:00Z \n12.54 -132.09 56.21 -60.35 \nGoogle Earth Engine \nhttps://developers.google.com/earth-engine/datasets\n\n- [](https://doi.org/https://www.csp-inc.org/)\n- [](https://doi.org/https://developers.google.com/earth-engine/datasets/catalog/CSP_ERGo_1_0_US_CHILI)"]]