Back to Search Start Over

Impact of profile-averaged soil ice fraction on passive microwave brightness temperature Diurnal Amplitude Variations (DAV) at L-band

Authors :
Shaoning Lv
Clemens Simmer
Yijian Zeng
Zhongbo Su
Jun Wen
Department of Water Resources
Digital Society Institute
UT-I-ITC-WCC
Faculty of Geo-Information Science and Earth Observation
Department of Earth Systems Analysis
Source :
Cold Regions Science and Technology, 205:103674. Elsevier
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The dynamic change of frozen soil is crucial to land-surface modeling, carbon feedback studies, ground engineering (e.g., constructions), and microwave remote sensing. L-Band satellite missions Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) and Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) are currently exploited to characterize soil into freeze or thaw (FT) states. However, brightness temperatures (TB) at L-band contain more information besides the FT state, particularly over permafrost or seasonally frozen soil, which has not been explored via current retrieval algorithms. To examine the potential for L-band TB observations, we define an index called Profile-Averaged Frozen Soil Fraction (Ff) related to Diurnal Amplitude Variation (DAV) of TB (i.e., ΔTB) based on the optical depth of the frozen soil column. We evaluated Ff inferred from the 0th-order microwave transfer model with the SMAP L1c product, the ground-based European Space Agency L-Band Radiometer III (ELBARA-III) TB observations, and temperature profiles collected at the Maqu station in northeastern Tibet. While there is a clear relationship between Ff and ΔTB, no apparent link exists with the ice content fraction (Ffi) within a fixed-depth soil column. The proposed model certifies that the profile-averaged soil ice content Ff relates to the dynamic microwave penetration depth by math and field measurement. The model reproduces well ΔTB in Period Freezing but has problems in Period Thawing when melted surface water obstruct the microwave signals. Our findings can be used to exploit ΔTB between 6 am and 6 pm, as a typically overpassing time by the SMOS and SMAP satellites, for estimating Ff, which can be further applied in weather/climate forecasting and for improving land-surface modeling.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0165232X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cold Regions Science and Technology, 205:103674. Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....18d307f94d088de04a50defe172ad181