Archive | 2021

Modelling of Microwave Multi-Frequency Emission and Backscatter by a Community Land Active Passive Microwave Radiative Transfer Modelling Platform (CLAP)

 
 
 
 

Abstract


Emission and backscattering at different frequencies have varied responses to soil physical processes (e.g., moisture redistribution, freeze-thaw) and vegetation growing/senescencing. Combing the use of active and passive microwave multi-frequency signals may provide complementary information, which can be used to better retrieve soil moisture, and vegetation biomass and water content for ecological applications. To this purpose, a Community Land Active Passive Microwave Radiative Transfer Modelling Platform (CLAP) was adopted in this study to simulate both emission (T B ) and backscatter (σ 0 ), in which the CLAP is backboned by the TorVergata model for modelling vegetation scattering, and an air-to-soil transition model (ATS) (accounting for surface dielectric roughness) integrated with the Advanced Integral Equation Model (AIEM) for modelling soil surface scattering. The accuracy of CLAP was assessed by both ground-based and spaceborne measurements, and the former was from the deployed microwave radiometer/scatterometer observatory at Maqu site on an alpine meadow over the Tibetan plateau. Specifically, for the passive case, simulated T B (emissivity multiplied by effective temperature) were compared to the ground-based ELBARA-III L-band observations, as well as Cband Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) and L-band Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) observations. For the active case, simulated σ 0 were compared to the groundbased scatterometer Cand L-bands observations, and C-band Sentinel and L-band Phased Array type L-band Synthetic Aperture Radar 2 (PALSAR-2) observations. This study is expected to contribute to improving the soil moisture retrieval accuracy for dedicated microwave sensor configurations.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.5194/EGUSPHERE-EGU21-6659
Language English
Journal None

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