IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing (Jan 2024)

A Comparison of Passive Microwave Emission Models for Estimating Brightness Temperature at L- and P-Bands Under Bare and Vegetated Soil Conditions

  • Foad Brakhasi,
  • Jeffrey P. Walker,
  • Jasmeet Judge,
  • Pang-Wei Liu,
  • Xiaoji Shen,
  • Nan Ye,
  • Xiaoling Wu,
  • In-Young Yeo,
  • Nithyapriya Boopathi,
  • Edward Kim,
  • Yann H. Kerr,
  • Thomas J. Jackson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JSTARS.2023.3344764
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17
pp. 2570 – 2585

Abstract

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P-band radiometry has been demonstrated to have a deeper sensing depth than L-band, making the consideration of multilayer microwave interactions necessary. In addition, the scattering and phase interference effects are different at the P-band, requiring a reconsideration of the need for coherent models. However, the impact remains to be clarified, and understanding the validity and limitations of these models at both L- and P-bands is crucial for their refinement and application. Therefore, two general categories of microwave emission models, including two stratified coherent models (Njoku and Wilhite) and four incoherent models (conventional tau-omega model and three multilayer models being zero-order, first-order, and incoherent solution), were intercompared for the first time on the same dataset. This evaluation utilized observations of L- and P-bands radiometry under different land cover conditions from a tower-based experiment in Victoria, Australia. Model estimations of brightness temperature (TB) were consistent with measurements, with the lowest root mean square error (RMSE) at P-band V-polarization under corn (2 K) and the highest RMSE at L-band H-polarization under bare soil (13 K). Coherent models performed slightly better than incoherent models under bare soil (3 K less RMSE), while the opposite was true under vegetated soil conditions (1 K less RMSE). Coherent and incoherent models showed maximum differences (3 K at P-band and 2 K at L-band), correlating strongly with soil moisture variations at 0–10 cm. Findings suggest that coherent and incoherent models performed similarly; thus, incoherent models may be preferable for estimating TB at L- and P-bands due to reduced computational complexity.

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