Generation of spatially complete and daily continuous surface soil moisture of high spatial resolution

2019 ◽  
Vol 233 ◽  
pp. 111364 ◽  
Author(s):  
Di Long ◽  
Liangliang Bai ◽  
La Yan ◽  
Caijin Zhang ◽  
Wenting Yang ◽  
...  
2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (11) ◽  
pp. 2099
Author(s):  
Felix Greifeneder ◽  
Claudia Notarnicola ◽  
Wolfgang Wagner

Due to its relation to the Earth’s climate and weather and phenomena like drought, flooding, or landslides, knowledge of the soil moisture content is valuable to many scientific and professional users. Remote-sensing offers the unique possibility for continuous measurements of this variable. Especially for agriculture, there is a strong demand for high spatial resolution mapping. However, operationally available soil moisture products exist with medium to coarse spatial resolution only (≥1 km). This study introduces a machine learning (ML)—based approach for the high spatial resolution (50 m) mapping of soil moisture based on the integration of Landsat-8 optical and thermal images, Copernicus Sentinel-1 C-Band SAR images, and modelled data, executable in the Google Earth Engine. The novelty of this approach lies in applying an entirely data-driven ML concept for global estimation of the surface soil moisture content. Globally distributed in situ data from the International Soil Moisture Network acted as an input for model training. Based on the independent validation dataset, the resulting overall estimation accuracy, in terms of Root-Mean-Squared-Error and R², was 0.04 m3·m−3 and 0.81, respectively. Beyond the retrieval model itself, this article introduces a framework for collecting training data and a stand-alone Python package for soil moisture mapping. The Google Earth Engine Python API facilitates the execution of data collection and retrieval which is entirely cloud-based. For soil moisture retrieval, it eliminates the requirement to download or preprocess any input datasets.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Schönbrodt-Stitt ◽  
Paolo Nasta ◽  
Nima Ahmadian ◽  
Markus Kurtenbach ◽  
Christopher Conrad ◽  
...  

<p>Mapping near-surface soil moisture (<em>θ</em>) is of tremendous relevance for a broad range of environment-related disciplines and meteorological, ecological, hydrological and agricultural applications. Globally available products offer the opportunity to address <em>θ</em> in large-scale modelling with coarse spatial resolution such as at the landscape level. However, <em>θ</em> estimation at higher spatial resolution is of vital importance for many small-scale applications. Therefore, we focus our study on a small-scale catchment (MFC2) belonging to the “Alento” hydrological observatory, located in southern Italy (Campania Region). The goal of this study is to develop new machine-learning approaches to estimate high grid-resolution (about 17 m cell size) <em>θ</em> maps from mainly backscatter measurements retrieved from C-band Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) based on Sentinel-1 (S1) images and from gridded terrain attributes. Thus, a workflow comprising a total of 48 SAR-based <em>θ</em> patterns estimated for 24 satellite overpass dates (revisit time of 6 days) each with ascendant and descendent orbits will be presented. To enable for the mapping, SAR-based <em>θ</em> data was calibrated with in-situ measurements carried out with a portable device during eight measurement campaigns at time of satellite overpasses (four overpass days in total with each ascendant and descendent satellite overpasses per day in November 2018). After the calibration procedure, data validation was executed from November 10, 2018 till March 28, 2019 by using two stationary sensors monitoring <em>θ</em> at high-temporal (1-min recording time). The specific sensor locations reflected two contrasting field conditions, one bare soil plot (frequently kept clear, without disturbance of vegetation cover) and one non-bare soil plot (real-world condition). Point-scale ground observations of <em>θ</em> were compared to pixel-scale (17 m × 17 m), SAR-based <em>θ</em> estimated for those pixels corresponding to the specific positions of the stationary sensors. Mapping performance was estimated through the root mean squared error (RMSE). For a short-term time series of <em>θ</em> (Nov 2018) integrating 136 in situ, sensor-based <em>θ</em> (<em>θ</em><sub>insitu</sub>) and 74 gravimetric-based <em>θ</em> (<em>θ</em><sub>gravimetric</sub>) measurements during a total of eight S1 overpasses, mapping performance already proved to be satisfactory with RMSE=0.039 m³m<sup>-</sup>³ and R²=0.92, respectively with RMSE=0.041 m³m<sup>-</sup>³ and R²=0.91. First results further reveal that estimated satellite-based <em>θ</em> patterns respond to the evolution of rainfall. With our workflow developed and results, we intend to contribute to improved environmental risk assessment by assimilating the results into hydrological models (e.g., HydroGeoSphere), and to support future studies on combined ground-based and SAR-based <em>θ</em> retrieval for forested land (future missions operating at larger wavelengths e.g. NISARL-band, Biomass P-band sensors).</p>


Author(s):  
R. Prajapati ◽  
D. Chakraborty ◽  
V. Kumar

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> Soil moisture influences numerous environmental processes occurring over large spatial and temporal scales. It profoundly influences the hydrological and meteorological activity together with climate predictions and hazard analysis. Space-borne sensors are capable of retrieving the surface soil moisture over a region on a regular basis. Latent heat measurements of soil, reflectance based methods, microwave measurements and synergistic approaches are some of the techniques used since long for providing soil moisture estimates over regional and global scales. Due to the dynamic interaction of soil with crops, retrieval of surface soil moisture is always challenging. This paper gives a brief overview of advance in soil moisture retrieval techniques, and an attempt to generate surface soil moisture from fine-resolution satellite remote sensing data. The optical remote sensing explores the linear relationship between land surface reflectance and soil moisture content, and through development of empirical spectral vegetation indices. Another way to estimate soil moisture emerged by measuring amplitude of diurnal temperature, which is closely related to thermal conductivity and heat capacity of soil. Emergence of radiometric satellite measurements at fine resolution has reached at a higher level of technology these days. Microwave remote sensing techniques have a long legacy of providing surface soil moisture estimates with reasonable accuracy. The SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) and SMAP (Soil Moisture Passive and Active) missions launched in 2009 and 2015 respectively, are completely dedicated for providing soil moisture at global scale with a spatial resolution of 35<span class="thinspace"></span>km &amp; 3&amp;ndash;40<span class="thinspace"></span>km. These soil moisture products, however, provides data at highly coarser spatial resolution. The launch of Sentinels gave insight by providing active radar and optical data at higher resolution (&amp;sim;10<span class="thinspace"></span>m). Sentinel-1 is the first SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) constellation having 6-day revisit time providing data in C-band with dual polarisations. However, no algorithm or methodology is available to generate surface soil moisture product at a finer resolution from dual polarisations. Sentinel-1 data has been used to generate regional surface soil moisture image through modelling. The same has been also used for generating surface soil moisture map of IARI farm at New Delhi. Dubois, a bare surface model, was tested for its suitability for surface soil moisture retrieval of the farm. In addition, radar- based Soil moisture (SM) proxy method was used over Sentinel-1 data for the month of July 2018, and validated through actual surface soil moisture (gravimetric) measurements. Results were satisfactory for a range of 4&amp;ndash;16<span class="thinspace"></span>m<sup>3</sup><span class="thinspace"></span>m<sup>&amp;minus;3</sup> of soil moisture, with coefficient of determination (R<sup>2</sup>) as 0.45, RMSE of 2.35 and a p-value of 0.005. However, over a higher range of soil moisture (21&amp;ndash;33<span class="thinspace"></span>m<sup>3</sup><span class="thinspace"></span>m<sup>&amp;minus;3</sup>), which occurred after the rainfall, the R<sup>2</sup> value reduced to 0.22 with larger RMSE. Results suggested that SM-proxy approach might work well for a limited range (drier part) of soil moisture content, and not for the wet soil.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 1119 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jovan Kovačević ◽  
Željko Cvijetinović ◽  
Nikola Stančić ◽  
Nenad Brodić ◽  
Dragan Mihajlović

ESA CCI SM products have provided remotely-sensed surface soil moisture (SSM) content with the best spatial and temporal coverage thus far, although its output spatial resolution of 25 km is too coarse for many regional and local applications. The downscaling methodology presented in this paper improves ESA CCI SM spatial resolution to 1 km using two-step approach. The first step is used as a data engineering tool and its output is used as an input for the Random forest model in the second step. In addition to improvements in terms of spatial resolution, the approach also considers the problem of data gaps. The filling of these gaps is the initial step of the procedure, which in the end produces a continuous product in both temporal and spatial domains. The methodology uses combined active and passive ESA CCI SM products in addition to in situ soil moisture observations and the set of auxiliary downscaling predictors. The research tested several variants of Random forest models to determine the best combination of ESA CCI SM products. The conclusion is that synergic use of all ESA CCI SM products together with the auxiliary datasets in the downscaling procedure provides better results than using just one type of ESA CCI SM product alone. The methodology was applied for obtaining SSM maps for the area of California, USA during 2016. The accuracy of tested models was validated using five-fold cross-validation against in situ data and the best variation of model achieved RMSE, R2 and MAE of 0.0518 m3/m3, 0.7312 and 0.0374 m3/m3, respectively. The methodology proved to be useful for generating high-resolution SSM products, although additional improvements are necessary.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Theresa C. van Hateren ◽  
Marco Chini ◽  
Patrick Matgen ◽  
Luca Pulvirenti ◽  
Nazzareno Pierdicca ◽  
...  

&lt;p&gt;Validation of remotely sensed soil moisture is a well-known issue. Reference data with the correct spatial and temporal resolution on large scales are sparse and lack spatial representativeness. Moreover, due to the heterogeneity of soil moisture in both space and time, even reference data cannot be considered to be &amp;#8220;ground truth&amp;#8221;. As such, uncertainties are difficult to quantify. Additionally, in remotely sensed soil moisture there are trade-offs between spatial resolution and temporal resolution, resolution and accuracy, and resolution and computing time. Here, we try to identify the best spatial resolution for Sentinel-1 based soil moisture estimation, considering the trade-off between product resolution and accuracy. We use the uncertainty&amp;#160; of the soil moisture estimate as a guide parameter, and focus on how product accuracy depends on factors as soil wetness, and characteristics of the vegetated canopy.&amp;#160; To this end, we compare Sentinel-1 soil moisture estimates to both in situ data and global reference data sets with a lower spatial resolution. Remotely sensed surface soil moisture data were obtained by applying the MULESME algorithm&amp;#160; (Pulvirenti et al., 2018) on Sentinel-1 data throughout 2020. An extensive field campaign was performed, where TDR data and volumetric soil samples were gathered. A nearby setup of permanent soil moisture probes additionally provided continuous measurements of soil moisture at different depths, from 10 to 60 centimetres. Global datasets were obtained from the SMOS satellite constellation, GLDAS, MERRA-2 and ESA CCI.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Pulvirenti, L., Squicciarino, G., Cenci, L., Boni, G., Pierdicca, N., Chini, M., Versace, P. &amp; Campanella, P. (2018). A surface soil moisture mapping service at national (Italian) scale based on Sentinel-1 data. &lt;em&gt;Environmental Modelling &amp; Software&lt;/em&gt;, &lt;em&gt;102&lt;/em&gt;, 13-28.&lt;/p&gt;


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bertrand Bonan ◽  
Clément Albergel ◽  
Adrien Napoly ◽  
Yongjun Zheng ◽  
Jean-Christophe Calvet

&lt;p&gt;LDAS-Monde is the offline land data assimilation system (LDAS) developed by M&amp;#233;t&amp;#233;o-France&amp;#8217;s research centre (CNRM) aiming to monitor the evolution of land surface variables (LSVs) at various scales, from regional to global. It combines numerical simulations from the multilayer and interactive vegetation ISBA land surface model and satellite-derived observations of surface soil moisture and leaf area index (LAI). LDAS-Monde has been successfully validated over the globe.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;In this work, we study the possibility to set up LDAS-Monde to the context of the kilometric spatial resolution. In this context, we assimilate satellite observations of LAI from the Copernicus Global Land Service (CGLS) into the ISBA land surface model forced with M&amp;#233;t&amp;#233;o-France&amp;#8217;s small scale numerical weather prediction system AROME. We produce a reanalysis of LSVs at 2.5-km spatial resolution over the AROME domain centred on France starting from 2017. The quality of this reanalysis is assessed by comparing the obtained reanalysis with satellite products of LAI and surface soil moisture from e.g. CGLS and in-situ measurements of soil moisture from various networks (SMOSMANIA, &amp;#8230;). We also show the ability of our system to monitor the evolution of LSVs in the context of the severe drought that France suffered during the summer 2018. LDAS-Monde at 2.5-km spatial resolution displays a great potential for agricultural monitoring at high resolution. We also plan to adapt our framework to 1.0-km spatial resolution.&lt;/p&gt;


Author(s):  
Theresa C. Van Hateren ◽  
Marco Chini ◽  
Patrick Matgen ◽  
Luca Pulvirenti ◽  
Nazzareno Pierdicca ◽  
...  

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