DocumentCode
143385
Title
Compared performances of microwave passive soil moisture retrievals (SMOS) and active soil moisture retrievals (ASCAT) using land surface model estimates (MERRA-LAND)
Author
Al-Yaari, A. ; Wigneron, J.-P. ; Ducharne, A. ; Kerr, Y. ; Wagner, W. ; Reichle, R. ; De Lannoy, G. ; Al Bitar, A. ; Dorigo, W. ; Parrens, M. ; Fernandez, R. ; Richaume, P. ; Mialon, A.
Author_Institution
INRA, Villenave-d´Ornon, France
fYear
2014
fDate
13-18 July 2014
Firstpage
2463
Lastpage
2466
Abstract
Performances of two global satellite-based surface soil moisture (SSM) retrievals with respect to model-based SSM derived from the MERRA (Modern-Era Retrospective analysis for Research and Applications) rea-nalysis were explored in this paper: (i) Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS; passive) Level-3 SSM (SMOSL3) and (ii) the Advanced Scatterometer (ASCAT; active) SSM. Temporal correlation was used to investigate the performance of SMOSL3 and ASCAT SSM products during the period 05/2010-2012 on a global basis. Both SMOSL3 and ASCAT (slightly better) captured well (R>0.70) the long-term variability of the modelled SSM, particularly, over the Indian subcontinent, the Great Plains of North America, and the Sahel. However, ASCAT had negative correlations in arid regions, in particular across the Sahara and the Arabian Peninsula. This may be due to complex scattering mechanisms over very dry surfaces. To explore the land cover dependence of the analyzed statistical indicators, the global correlation results were averaged per biome extracted from a global map of biomes. In general, SMOSL3 and ASCAT performances behaved differently from one biome to another. For SMOSL3, the highest average correlation was observed over “tropical semi-arid” (R = ~ 0.5) and “temperate semi-arid” biomes, whereas for ASCAT, the highest correlations were observed over “tropical semi-arid” (R = ~ 0.7) and “tropical humid” biomes. The poorest agreement for both SMOSL3 and ASCAT was generally found over “tundra” and “desert temperate” biomes, particularly for ASCAT. This study showed that the performance of both SMOSL3 and ASCAT is highly dependent on vegetation. We also showed that both of them provide complementary information on SSM, which implies a potential for data fusion which would be pertinent for the ESA climate change initiative (CCI).
Keywords
hydrological techniques; land cover; moisture; radiometry; remote sensing; sensor fusion; soil; ASCAT SSM products; ESA climate change initiative; MERRA-LAND; SMOSL3 SSM products; data fusion; global satellite-based surface soil moisture retrievals; land cover dependence; land surface model estimates; microwave passive soil moisture retrievals; temperate semiarid biomes; tropical semiarid biomes; Correlation; Land surface; Meteorology; Remote sensing; Soil moisture; Vegetation mapping; ASCAT; SMOS; Soil moisture; biomes;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium (IGARSS), 2014 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Quebec City, QC
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2014.6946971
Filename
6946971
Link To Document