Abstract
Using a combination of a surface energy balance equation and an approximate expression of water vapor and sensible heat transfer, an equation is formulated relating potential evaporation for net radiation, ambient air properties, and surface roughness. As an improvement over the earlier Penman version, the proposed model contains no empirical constants or functions. Tests of the model in Phoenix, Arizona, using open water, wet bare soil, and well watered alfalfa, show excellent agreement of calculated and measured values on an hourly and daily basis under a variety of circumstances. Test conditions typically included advection of sensible heat to the evaporating surface in a large proportion to the latent heat flux, as well as high values of radiant flux, ambient temperatures, and vapor pressure deficits. The use of daily average values for the weather variables in the model, rather than hourly data, did not give appreciably different results or conclusions on a series of mostly clear days, suggesting that the combination model is not only accurate but also practical and generally applicable. (Key words: Evaporation; evapotranspiration; meteorology)

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