Authors
J-P Wigneron, J-C Calvet, Thierry Pellarin, Adriaan A Van de Griend, Michael Berger, Paolo Ferrazzoli
Publication date
2003/6/15
Source
Remote Sensing of Environment
Volume
85
Issue
4
Pages
489-506
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Surface soil moisture is a key variable used to describe water and energy exchanges at the land surface/atmosphere interface. Passive microwave remotely sensed data have great potential for providing estimates of soil moisture with good temporal repetition on a daily basis and on a regional scale (∼10 km). However, the effects of vegetation cover, soil temperature, snow cover, topography, and soil surface roughness also play a significant role in the microwave emission from the surface. Different soil moisture retrieval approaches have been developed to account for the various parameters contributing to the surface microwave emission. Four main types of algorithms can be roughly distinguished depending on the way vegetation and temperature effects are accounted for. These algorithms are based on (i) land cover classification maps, (ii) ancillary remote sensing indexes, and (iii) two-parameter or (iv) three …
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