Title :
Modeling microwave interactions with crops and comparison with ERS-2 SAR observations
Author :
Cookmartin, Geoff ; Saich, Paul ; Quegan, Shaun ; Cordey, Ralph ; Burgess-Allen, Peter ; Sowter, Andrew
Author_Institution :
Centre for Earth Obs. Sci., Sheffield Univ., UK
fDate :
3/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A comprehensive multilayer second-order radiative transfer model, driven entirely by intensive field observations, is used to show that second order terms contribute at most 0.5 dB to the backscattering coefficient at all polarizations from wheat and barley throughout the growing season and 1 dB to the copolar response of oilseed rape. Under these circumstances, an equivalent integrable first-order model, with coefficients derived from full model runs, can be formulated. This allows the role of each of the plant components in attenuating and scattering the radar signal to be clarified, and provides a basis for quantitative comparison of observed ERS-2 backscatter values with model calculations, taking full account of measurement uncertainties. Discrepancies between the two suggest that effective attenuation through mature cereal crops is overestimated by the model. This appears to be either an intrinsic failure of the radiative transfer formulation or (more likely) due to an inadequate adaptation of the notion of crop coverage to the microwave case. Nonplanarity of leaves is an important source of model error for oilseed rape
Keywords :
agriculture; backscatter; geophysical techniques; radar cross-sections; radar polarimetry; radar theory; remote sensing by radar; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; vegetation mapping; ERS-2; SAR; agriculture; attenuation; backscatter; backscattering coefficient; barley; cereal crops; copolar response; crop coverage; crops; geophysical measurement technique; growing season; integrable first-order model; leaf orientation; microwave interaction; model; multilayer second-order radiative transfer model; nonplanarity; oilseed rape; polarization; radar polarimetry; radar remote sensing; radar scattering; radiative transfer formulation; second order terms; spaceborne radar; synthetic aperture radar; theory; vegetation mapping; wheat; Attenuation; Backscatter; Crops; Helium; Measurement uncertainty; Nonhomogeneous media; Polarization; Radar measurements; Radar scattering; Soil;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on