Science of Remote Sensing (Jun 2024)

Retrieving forest soil moisture from SMAP observations considering a microwave polarization difference index (MPDI) to τ-ω model

  • Chang-Hwan Park,
  • Thomas Jagdhuber,
  • Andreas Colliander,
  • Aaron Berg,
  • Michael H. Cosh,
  • Johan Lee,
  • Kyung-On Boo

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9
p. 100131

Abstract

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Estimating soil moisture from microwave brightness temperature is extremely challenging in densely vegetated areas. The soil moisture retrieved from the Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) measurements tends to be consistently overestimated, sometimes exceeding the saturation level of mineral soils. Therefore, the retrieved soil moisture cannot detect or monitor climate extremes, such as floods and droughts for forests, natural resource management, and climate change research. We hypothesize that the main issue is that the scattering albedo (ω) and the optical depth (τ) are parameterized solely with NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index), neglecting the polarization characteristics from vegetation structure. This study proposes a weighting factor between scattering and optical thickness, a function of MPDI (Microwave Polarization Difference Index), and applies it to both parameters simultaneously to increase the scattering effect and decrease the attenuation effect in high MPDI. The validation results based on the Climate Reference Network revealed that considering MPDI is critical in reducing soil moisture overestimation errors and obtaining more accurate soil moisture over forested regions. This results in correlation improving from 0.36 to 0.44, a decrease in ubRMSE from 0.179 to 0.125 cm³cm−³, and bias lowering from 0.127 to 0.060 cm³cm−³ in comparison with the SMAP measurements over forested regions. Editor highlights: • Optical depth increases with high NDVI and low MPDI. • Scattering albedo increases with high NDVI and high MPDI. • Increasing scattering albedo decreases brightness temperature in forward simulation. • Decreased brightness temperature in simulation resolved overestimation of SMAP SM. • L-band (1.4 GHz) radiometer measurements can assess forest soil moisture (SM).

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