Summary of Advances in Heat-Pulse Methods: Measuring Near-Surface Soil Water Content

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2018-01-01
Authors
Zhang, Xiao
Ren, Tusheng
Heitman, Joshua
Horton, Robert
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Horton, Robert
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Agronomy

The Department of Agronomy seeks to teach the study of the farm-field, its crops, and its science and management. It originally consisted of three sub-departments to do this: Soils, Farm-Crops, and Agricultural Engineering (which became its own department in 1907). Today, the department teaches crop sciences and breeding, soil sciences, meteorology, agroecology, and biotechnology.

History
The Department of Agronomy was formed in 1902. From 1917 to 1935 it was known as the Department of Farm Crops and Soils.

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1902–present

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  • Department of Farm Crops and Soils (1917–1935)

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Agronomy
Abstract

Surface layer soil water content is important for evaporation, surface energy balance, seed germination, residue decomposition, microbial activity, and many other biological, chemical, and physical processes. The standard method (i.e., the gravimetric method) for measuring soil water content requires destructive sampling and is unsuitable for continuous measurement. Techniques such as neutron thermalization and time domain reflectometry suffer relatively large errors in measuring soil water content near the surface. In a recent Methods of Soil Analysis article, the authors present the principles and procedures for using a heat-pulse sensor to determine near-surface soil water content.

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This article is published as Zhang, Xiao, Tusheng Ren, Joshua Heitman, and Robert Horton. "Summary of Advances in Heat-Pulse Methods: Measuring Near-Surface Soil Water Content." Soil Science Society of America Journal 82, no. 5 (2018): 1015. doi: 10.2136/sssaj2018.04.0138.

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Mon Jan 01 00:00:00 UTC 2018
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