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AMSR-E data inversion for soil temperature estimation under snow cover
Authors:Jacqueline Kohn
Affiliation:
  • Centre d'Applications et de Recherches en Télédétection (CARTEL), Université de Sherbrooke, 2500, boul. de l'Université, Sherbrooke, Québec, Canada J1K 2R1
  • Abstract:Climate warming is the focus of several studies where the soil temperature plays an essential role as a state variable for the surface energy balance of the Earth. Many methods have been developed to determine summer surface temperature, but the determination in presence of snow is an ill-conditioned problem for microwave techniques because snow changes the emissivity of the surface. This project aims to improve the estimation of soil temperature, within the top 5 cm of the ground, under the snowpack using passive microwave remote sensing. Results show the potential of the passive microwave brightness temperature inversion at 10 GHz (derived from the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer—Earth Observing System, AMSR-E) for the estimation of soil temperature using a physical multilayer snow-soil model (SNTHERM) coupled with a snow emission model (HUT). The snow model is driven with meteorological measurements from ground-based stations as well as data generated from reanalysis. The proposed iterative retrieval method minimizes the difference between the simulated and measured brightness temperature using the soil temperature as a free parameter given by SNTHERM. Results are validated against ground-based measurements at several sites across Canada through several winter seasons. The overall root mean square error and bias in the retrieved soil temperature is respectively 3.29 K and 0.56 K, lower than the error derived from the snow-soil model without the use of remote sensing. The accuracy in detection of frozen/unfrozen soil under the snowpack is 78%, which is improved up to 81% if the spring melting period is not considered. This original procedure constitutes a very promising tool to characterize the soil (frozen or not) under snow cover, as well as its evolution in northern remote locations where measurements are unavailable.
    Keywords:Soil temperature  Snow cover  SNTHERM model  HUT snow emission model  Canada
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