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RESEARCH PRODUCT
On the determination of coherent solar climates over a tropical island with a complex topography
François BonnardotJörg TrentmannJean-pierre ChabriatBenjamin PohlGuillaume JumauxPauline MialhePauline MialheBéatrice MorelMiloud Bessafisubject
Complex topography020209 energyLa Réunion island02 engineering and technologyAtmospheric sciencesSurface solar radiationCluster analysisSolar Resource0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringGeneral Materials Science14. Life underwatergeographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryRenewable Energy Sustainability and the Environmentbusiness.industryComplex meteorological context021001 nanoscience & nanotechnologyRenewable energyIndian oceanTropical islandsVolcano[SDU.STU.CL]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Earth Sciences/Climatology13. Climate actionPeriod (geology)Seasonal/diurnal cyclesEnvironmental scienceSpatial variability0210 nano-technologybusinessSARAH-Edescription
Abstract Many tropical islands aim at developing a greener self-sufficient energy production systems based on renewable energy, notably solar-generated electricity. This work explores the mean diurnal and annual solar cycles over La Reunion island (southwest Indian Ocean: 21°S, 55.5°E), and their spatial behavior, using the Solar surfAce RAdiation Heliosat – East (SARAH-E) satellite-derived data at high spatial ( 0.05 ° × 0.05 ° ) and time (hourly) resolutions over period 1999–2016. Comparisons of the SARAH-E data with ground-based measurements over the period 2011–2015 show differences of ~ 15 % for diurnal-seasonal variations. The solar resource over the island displays strong spatial variability, with differences larger than 100 W m - 2 between coastal and mountainous zones. The mean solar resource is lower on the island than on the nearby sea by ~ 20 %. The strongest interactions between the diurnal and annual cycles are found at the windward mid-slopes and near the active volcano, in line with the well-known cloud processes encountered there. A clustering of solar zones, based on diurnal-seasonal cycles, structures the island into a dipole that opposes the western to the eastern side of the island.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2020-08-01 | Solar Energy |