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Development and validation of the SMAP enhanced passive soil moisture product

Authors :
Y. H. Kerr
Eric E. Small
Ernesto Lopez-Baeza
Peggy O'Neill
John H. Prueger
Mark S. Seyfried
Simon Yueh
David D. Bosch
Jeffrey P. Walker
Marek Zreda
Aaron A. Berg
Rajat Bindlish
J.C. Calvet
F. Uldall
A. Pacheco
Thomas J. Jackson
Andreas Colliander
Michael A. Palecki
A. Gonzalez-Zamora
Scott Dunbar
Xiaoling Wu
Tracy Rowlandson
Julian Chaubell
Fan Chen
Jun Asanuma
Michael H. Cosh
J.R. Piepmeier
Zhongbo Su
C. Holifield Collins
José Martínez-Fernández
H. McNairn
M. Thibeault
R. van der Velde
Todd G. Caldwell
Dara Entekhabi
Patrick J. Starks
W. T. Crow
S. Chan
Department of Water Resources
UT-I-ITC-WCC
Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation
Source :
2017 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium: International Cooperation for Global Awareness, IGARSS 2017-Proceedings, 2539-2542, STARTPAGE=2539;ENDPAGE=2542;TITLE=2017 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, IGARSS
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
IEEE, 2017.

Abstract

Since the beginning of its routine science operation in March 2015, the NASA SMAP observatory has been returning interference-mitigated brightness temperature observations at L-band (1.41 GHz) frequency from space. The resulting data enable frequent global mapping of soil moisture with a retrieval uncertainty below 0.040 m 3 /m 3 at a 36 km spatial scale. This paper describes the development and validation of an enhanced version of the current standard soil moisture product. Compared with the standard product that is posted on a 36 km grid, the new enhanced product is posted on a 9 km grid. Derived from the same time-ordered brightness temperature observations that feed the current standard passive soil moisture product, the enhanced passive soil moisture product leverages on the Backus-Gilbert optimal interpolation technique that more fully utilizes the additional information from the original radiometer observations to achieve global mapping of soil moisture with enhanced clarity. The resulting enhanced soil moisture product was assessed using long-term in situ soil moisture observations from core validation sites located in diverse biomes and was found to exhibit an average retrieval uncertainty below 0.040 m 3 /m 3 . As of December 2016, the enhanced soil moisture product has been made available to the public from the NASA Distributed Active Archive Center at the National Snow and Ice Data Center.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
2017 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium: International Cooperation for Global Awareness, IGARSS 2017-Proceedings, 2539-2542, STARTPAGE=2539;ENDPAGE=2542;TITLE=2017 IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, IGARSS
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....10c06a63b3db8f28994b251e5749c942