4.7 Article

Towards Including Dynamic Vegetation Parameters in the EUMETSAT H SAF ASCAT Soil Moisture Products

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13081463

Keywords

soil moisture; backscatter; radar remote sensing; vegetation; scatterometry; ASCAT

Funding

  1. EUMETSAT Visiting Scientist Activity [H SAF CDOP3 H AVS18 02]
  2. Austrian Space Application Programme (ASAP) through the DWC-Radar project [873658]

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The study utilized a kernel smoother to estimate coefficients for soil moisture retrieval, distinguishing between their use for backscatter normalization and vegetation correction. Results showed that using the kernel smoother can improve uncertainty caused by interannual variability in vegetation.
The TU Wien Soil Moisture Retrieval (TUW SMR) approach is used to produce several operational soil moisture products from the Advanced Scatterometer (ASCAT) on the Metop series of satellites as part of the EUMETSAT Satellite Application Facility on Support to Operational Hydrology and Water Management (H SAF). The incidence angle dependence of backscatter is described by a second-order Taylor polynomial, the coefficients of which are used to normalize ASCAT observations to the reference incidence angle of 40 circle and for correcting vegetation effects. Recently, a kernel smoother was developed to estimate the coefficients dynamically, in order to account for interannual variability. In this study, we used the kernel smoother for estimating these coefficients, where we distinguished for the first time between their two uses, meaning that we used a short and fixed window width for the backscatter normalisation while we tested different window widths for optimizing the vegetation correction. In particular, we investigated the impact of using the dynamic vegetation parameters on soil moisture retrieval. We compared soil moisture retrievals based on the dynamic vegetation parameters to those estimated using the current operational approach by examining their agreement, in terms of the Pearson correlation coefficient, unbiased RMSE and bias with respect to in situ soil moisture. Data from the United States Climate Research Network were used to study the influence of climate class and land cover type on performance. The sensitivity to the kernel smoother half-width was also investigated. Results show that estimating the vegetation parameters with the kernel smoother can yield an improvement when there is interannual variability in vegetation due to a trend or a change in the amplitude or timing of the seasonal cycle. However, using the kernel smoother introduces high-frequency variability in the dynamic vegetation parameters, particularly for shorter kernel half-widths.

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