4.7 Article

Joint Sentinel-1 and SMAP data assimilation to improve soil moisture estimates

Journal

GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS
Volume 44, Issue 12, Pages 6145-6153

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1002/2017GL073904

Keywords

Sentinel-1; SMAP; data assimilation; soil moisture

Funding

  1. Belgian Science Policy (BELSPO) [SR/00/302]
  2. SMAP Science Team

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SMAP (Soil Moisture Active and Passive) radiometer observations at similar to 40 km resolution are routinely assimilated into the NASA Catchment Land Surface Model to generate the 9 km SMAP Level-4 Soil Moisture product. This study demonstrates that adding high-resolution radar observations from Sentinel-1 to the SMAP assimilation can increase the spatiotemporal accuracy of soil moisture estimates. Radar observations were assimilated either separately from or simultaneously with radiometer observations. Assimilation impact was assessed by comparing 3-hourly, 9 km surface and root-zone soil moisture simulations with in situ measurements from 9 km SMAP core validation sites and sparse networks, from May 2015 to December 2016. The Sentinel-1 assimilation consistently improved surface soil moisture, whereas root-zone impacts were mostly neutral. Relatively larger improvements were obtained from SMAP assimilation. The joint assimilation of SMAP and Sentinel-1 observations performed best, demonstrating the complementary value of radar and radiometer observations.

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