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Disaggregation Of Passive Microwave Soil Moisture For Use In Watershed Hydrology Applications

Posted on:2016-04-28Degree:Ph.DType:Dissertation
University:University of South CarolinaCandidate:Fang, BinFull Text:PDF
GTID:1473390017478401Subject:Remote Sensing
Abstract/Summary:
In recent years the passive microwave remote sensing has been providing soil moisture products using instruments on board satellite/airborne platforms. Spatial resolution has been restricted by the diameter of antenna which is inversely proportional to resolution. As a result, typical products have a spatial resolution of tens of kilometers, which is not compatible for some hydrological research applications. For this reason, the dissertation explores three disaggregation algorithms that estimate L-band passive microwave soil moisture at the subpixel level by using high spatial resolution remote sensing products from other optical and radar instruments were proposed and implemented in this investigation. The first technique utilized a thermal inertia theory to establish a relationship between daily temperature change and average soil moisture modulated by the vegetation condition was developed by using NLDAS, AVHRR, SPOT and MODIS data were applied to disaggregate the 25 km AMSR-E soil moisture to 1 km in Oklahoma. The second algorithm was built on semi empirical physical models (NP89 and LP92) derived from numerical experiments between soil evaporation efficiency and soil moisture over the surface skin sensing depth (a few millimeters) by using simulated soil temperature derived from MODIS and NLDAS as well as AMSR-E soil moisture at 25 km to disaggregate the coarse resolution soil moisture to 1 km in Oklahoma. The third algorithm modeled the relationship between the change in co-polarized radar backscatter and the remotely sensed microwave change in soil moisture retrievals and assumed that change in soil moisture was a function of only the canopy opacity. The change detection algorithm was implemented using aircraft based the remote sensing data from PALS and UAVSAR that were collected in SMPAVEX12 in southern Manitoba, Canada. The PALS L-band h-polarization radiometer soil moisture retrievals were disaggregated by combining them with the PALS and UAVSAR L-band hh-polarization radar spatial resolutions of 1500 m and 5 m/800 m, respectively. All three algorithms were validated using ground measurements from network in situ stations or handheld hydra probes. The validation results demonstrate the practicability on coarse resolution passive microwave soil moisture products.
Keywords/Search Tags:Soil moisture, Passive microwave, Remote sensing, Resolution, PALS and UAVSAR
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