4.7 Article

Ground-penetrating radar measurement of crop and surface water content dynamics

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 96, Issue 1, Pages 119-134

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2005.01.018

Keywords

ground penetrating radar; vegetation canopy scattering; soil water content measurement

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Ground-penetrating radar (GPR) with a suspended 1 GHz horn antenna was deployed for measurement of soil water contents and crop canopy properties over bare and electrically terminating surfaces. Surface reflection (SR) and signal propagation times (PT) were used to independently determine dielectric permittivity and water content of soil and canopy. Measured surface reflection coefficients progressively decreased with increasing canopy biomass according to Beer-Lambert type relationships. In contrast, PT measurements remained unaffected by canopy, and hence provided an accurate account of soil water content dynamics. Immediately after canopy removal, SR-based soil water content measurements were in close agreement with PT values. Canopy dielectric properties were inferred from canopy water contents (epsilon(c-CWC)) and canopy propagation times (epsilon(c-CPT)). Distinct canopy reflections were correlated with key canopy biophysical parameters. The study demonstrates the usefulness of a horn antenna GPR for characterization of vegetation canopy scattering, and for subcanopy water content measurements within a well-defined footprint, thereby offering a potential for calibration and verification of radar data collected from air- and spaceborne platforms. (c) 2005 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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