4.7 Article

A Simple Real LST Reconstruction Method Combining Thermal Infrared and Microwave Remote Sensing Based on Temperature Conservation

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 15, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs15123033

Keywords

land surface temperature; MODIS; AMSR2; all-weather; real LST

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This study proposes a simple and effective method for reconstructing real land surface temperature (LST) by combining thermal infrared and microwave remote sensing based on temperature conservation (TMTC). The method fills in the missing microwave data and downscales it using MODIS LST and auxiliary data. The TMTC method maintains temperature consistency between LST and microwave LST and shows relatively accurate results. This research is of great importance for future investigations in various disciplines that require real LSTs.
The land surface temperature (LST), defined as the radiative skin temperature of the ground, plays a critical role in land surface systems, from the regional to the global scale. The commonly utilized daily Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) LST product at a resolution of one kilometer often contains missing values attributable to atmospheric influences. Reconstructing these missing values and obtaining a spatially complete LST is of great research significance. However, most existing methods are tailored for reconstructing clear-sky LST rather than the more realistic cloudy-sky LST, and their computational processes are relatively complex. Therefore, this paper proposes a simple and effective real LST reconstruction method combining Thermal Infrared and Microwave Remote Sensing Based on Temperature Conservation (TMTC). TMTC first fills the microwave data gaps and then downscales the microwave data by using MODIS LST and auxiliary data. This method maintains the temperature of the resulting LST and microwave LST on the microwave pixel scale. The average Mean Absolute Error (MAE), Root Mean Square Error (RMSE), and R-2 of TMTC were 3.14 K, 4.10 K, and 0.88 for the daytime and 2.34 K, 3.20 K, and 0.90 for the nighttime, respectively. The ideal MAE of the TMTC method exhibits less than 1.5 K during daylight hours and less than 1 K at night, but the accuracy of the method is currently limited by the inversion accuracy of microwave LST and whether different LST products have undergone time normalization. Additionally, the TMTC method has spatial generality. This article establishes the groundwork for future investigations in diverse disciplines that necessitate real LSTs.

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