Remote Sensing (Jul 2024)

Surface Soil Moisture Estimation from Time Series of RADARSAT Constellation Mission Compact Polarimetric Data for the Identification of Water-Saturated Areas

  • Igor Zakharov,
  • Sarah Kohlsmith,
  • Jon Hornung,
  • François Charbonneau,
  • Pradeep Bobby,
  • Mark Howell

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16142664
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 14
p. 2664

Abstract

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Soil moisture is one of the main factors affecting microwave radar backscatter from the ground. While there are other factors that affect backscatter levels (for instance, surface roughness, vegetation, and incident angle), relative variations in soil moisture can be estimated using space-based, medium resolution, multi-temporal synthetic aperture radar (SAR). Understanding the distribution and identification of water-saturated areas using SAR soil moisture can be important for wetland mapping. The SAR soil moisture retrieval algorithm provides a relative assessment and requires calibration over wet and dry periods. In this work, relative soil moisture indicators are derived from a time series of the RADARSAT Constellation Mission (RCM) SAR compact polarimetric (CP) data over reclaimed areas of an oil sands mine in Alberta, Canada. An evaluation of the soil moisture product is performed using in situ measurements showing agreement from June to September. The surface scattering component of m-chi CP decomposition and the RL SAR products demonstrated a good agreement with the field data (low RMSE values and a perfect alignment with field-identified wetlands).

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