M. Thibeault
Comisión Nacional de Actividades Espaciales
Network
Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.
Publication
Featured researches published by M. Thibeault.
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2016
Steven Chan; Rajat Bindlish; Peggy E. O'Neill; Eni G. Njoku; Thomas J. Jackson; Andreas Colliander; Fan Chen; Mariko S. Burgin; R. Scott Dunbar; Jeffrey R. Piepmeier; Simon H. Yueh; Dara Entekhabi; Michael H. Cosh; Todd G. Caldwell; Jeffrey P. Walker; Xiaoling Wu; Aaron A. Berg; Tracy L. Rowlandson; Anna Pacheco; Heather McNairn; M. Thibeault; Ángel González-Zamora; Mark S. Seyfried; David D. Bosch; Patrick J. Starks; David C. Goodrich; John H. Prueger; Michael A. Palecki; Eric E. Small; Marek Zreda
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite mission was launched on January 31, 2015. The observatory was developed to provide global mapping of high-resolution soil moisture and freeze-thaw state every two to three days using an L-band (active) radar and an L-band (passive) radiometer. After an irrecoverable hardware failure of the radar on July 7, 2015, the radiometer-only soil moisture product became the only operational soil moisture product for SMAP. The product provides soil moisture estimates posted on a 36 km Earth-fixed grid produced using brightness temperature observations from descending passes. Within months after the commissioning of the SMAP radiometer, the product was assessed to have attained preliminary (beta) science quality, and data were released to the public for evaluation in September 2015. The product is available from the NASA Distributed Active Archive Center at the National Snow and Ice Data Center. This paper provides a summary of the Level 2 Passive Soil Moisture Product (L2_SM_P) and its validation against in situ ground measurements collected from different data sources. Initial in situ comparisons conducted between March 31, 2015 and October 26, 2015, at a limited number of core validation sites (CVSs) and several hundred sparse network points, indicate that the V-pol Single Channel Algorithm (SCA-V) currently delivers the best performance among algorithms considered for L2_SM_P, based on several metrics. The accuracy of the soil moisture retrievals averaged over the CVSs was 0.038 m3/m3 unbiased root-mean-square difference (ubRMSD), which approaches the SMAP mission requirement of 0.040 m3/m3.
Journal of Hydrometeorology | 2017
Rolf H. Reichle; Gabrielle De Lannoy; Q. Liu; Joseph V. Ardizzone; Andreas Colliander; Austin Conaty; Wade T. Crow; Thomas J. Jackson; Lucas A. Jones; John S. Kimball; Randal D. Koster; Sarith P. P. Mahanama; Edmond B. Smith; Aaron A. Berg; Simone Bircher; David D. Bosch; Todd G. Caldwell; Michael H. Cosh; Ángel González-Zamora; Chandra D. Holifield Collins; Karsten H. Jensen; Stan Livingston; Ernesto Lopez-Baeza; Heather McNairn; Mahta Moghaddam; Anna Pacheco; Thierry Pellarin; John H. Prueger; Tracy L. Rowlandson; Mark S. Seyfried
AbstractThe Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission Level-4 Surface and Root-Zone Soil Moisture (L4_SM) data product is generated by assimilating SMAP L-band brightness temperature observations into the NASA Catchment land surface model. The L4_SM product is available from 31 March 2015 to present (within 3 days from real time) and provides 3-hourly, global, 9-km resolution estimates of surface (0–5 cm) and root-zone (0–100 cm) soil moisture and land surface conditions. This study presents an overview of the L4_SM algorithm, validation approach, and product assessment versus in situ measurements. Core validation sites provide spatially averaged surface (root zone) soil moisture measurements for 43 (17) “reference pixels” at 9- and 36-km gridcell scales located in 17 (7) distinct watersheds. Sparse networks provide point-scale measurements of surface (root zone) soil moisture at 406 (311) locations. Core validation site results indicate that the L4_SM product meets its soil moisture accuracy requiremen...
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2017
Seung-Bum Kim; Jakob J. van Zyl; Joel T. Johnson; Mahta Moghaddam; Leung Tsang; Andreas Colliander; R.S. Dunbar; Thomas J. Jackson; Sermsak Jaruwatanadilok; Richard D. West; Aaron A. Berg; Todd G. Caldwell; Michael H. Cosh; David C. Goodrich; Stanley Livingston; Ernesto Lopez-Baeza; Tracy L. Rowlandson; M. Thibeault; Jeffrey P. Walker; Dara Entekhabi; Eni G. Njoku; Peggy E. O'Neill; Simon H. Yueh
This paper evaluates the retrieval of soil moisture in the top 5-cm layer at 3-km spatial resolution using L-band dual-copolarized Soil Moisture Active-Passive (SMAP) synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data that mapped the globe every three days from mid-April to early July, 2015. Surface soil moisture retrievals using radar observations have been challenging in the past due to complicating factors of surface roughness and vegetation scattering. Here, physically based forward models of radar scattering for individual vegetation types are inverted using a time-series approach to retrieve soil moisture while correcting for the effects of static roughness and dynamic vegetation. Compared with the past studies in homogeneous field scales, this paper performs a stringent test with the satellite data in the presence of terrain slope, subpixel heterogeneity, and vegetation growth. The retrieval process also addresses any deficiencies in the forward model by removing any time-averaged bias between model and observations and by adjusting the strength of vegetation contributions. The retrievals are assessed at 14 core validation sites representing a wide range of global soil and vegetation conditions over grass, pasture, shrub, woody savanna, corn, wheat, and soybean fields. The predictions of the forward models used agree with SMAP measurements to within 0.5 dB unbiased-root-mean-square error (ubRMSE) and −0.05 dB (bias) for both copolarizations. Soil moisture retrievals have an accuracy of 0.052 m3/m3 ubRMSE, −0.015 m3/m3 bias, and a correlation of 0.50, compared to in situ measurements, thus meeting the accuracy target of 0.06 m3/m3 ubRMSE. The successful retrieval demonstrates the feasibility of a physically based time series retrieval with L-band SAR data for characterizing soil moisture over diverse conditions of soil moisture, surface roughness, and vegetation.
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing | 2016
Raquel Niclòs; Raúl Rivas; Vicente García-Santos; Carolina Doña; Enric Valor; Mauro Holzman; Martín Ignacio Bayala; Facundo Carmona; Dora Ocampo; Alvaro Soldano; M. Thibeault; Vicente Caselles; Juan Manuel Sánchez
A field campaign was carried out to evaluate the Soil Moisture (SM) MIR_SMUDP2 product (v5.51) generated from the data of the Microwave Imaging Radiometer using Aperture Synthesis (MIRAS) aboard the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission. The study area was the Pampean Region of Argentina, which was selected because it is a vast area of flatlands containing quite homogeneous rain-fed croplands, which are considered SMOS nominal land uses and hardly affected by radio-frequency interference contamination. Transects of ground handheld SM measurements were performed using ThetaProbe ML2x probes within four Icosahedral Snyder Equal Area Earth (ISEA) grid nodes, where permanent SM stations are located. The campaign results showed a negative bias of -0.02 m3m-3 between concurrent SMOS data and ground SM measurements, which means a slight SMOS underestimation, and a standard deviation of ±0.06 m3m-3. Additionally, a good correlation was obtained between the handheld SM measurements taken during the campaign and the permanent SM station data within a node, which pointed out that the station data could be used as reference data to evaluate the SMOS product over a longer temporal period. SMOS-retrieved data were also compared with station mean SM values from 2012 to 2014. A general SMOS underestimation of -0.05 m3m-3 was observed, with a standard deviation of ±0.04 m3m-3, which yields an uncertainty of ±0.07 m3m-3 for the SMOS product. Although the random error meets the SMOS missions goal of ±0.04 m3m-3, the product overall uncertainty is higher than that due to the significant dry bias, which is also found in other regions of the world.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2016
Peggy E. O'Neill; S. Chan; Andreas Colliander; R. Scott Dunbar; Eni G. Njoku; Rajat Bindlish; Fan Chen; Thomas J. Jackson; Mariko S. Burgin; Jeffrey R. Piepmeier; Simon H. Yueh; Dara Entekhabi; Michael H. Cosh; Todd G. Caldwell; Jeffrey P. Walker; Xiaoling Wu; Aaron A. Berg; Tracy L. Rowlandson; Anna Pacheco; Heather McNairn; M. Thibeault; Ángel González-Zamora; Mark S. Seyfried; David D. Bosch; Patrick J. Starks; David C. Goodrich; John H. Prueger; Michael A. Palecki; Eric E. Small; Marek Zreda
NASAs Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission launched on January 31, 2015 into a sun-synchronous 6 am/6 pm orbit with an objective to produce global mapping of high-resolution soil moisture and freeze-thaw state every 2-3 days using an L-band (active) radar and an L-band (passive) radiometer. The SMAP radiometer began acquiring routine science data on March 31, 2015 and continues to operate nominally. SMAPs radiometer-derived soil moisture product (L2_SM_P) provides soil moisture estimates posted on a 36 km fixed Earth grid using brightness temperature observations from descending (6 am) passes and ancillary data. A beta quality version of L2_SM_P was released to the public in September, 2015, with the fully validated L2_SM_P soil moisture data expected to be released in May, 2016. Additional improvements (including optimization of retrieval algorithm parameters and upscaling approaches) and methodology expansions (including increasing the number of core sites, model-based intercomparisons, and results from several intensive field campaigns) are anticipated in moving from accuracy assessment of the beta quality data to an evaluation of the fully validated L2_SM_P data product.
Remote Sensing of Environment | 2018
Jana Kolassa; Rolf H. Reichle; Q. Liu; Seyed Hamed Alemohammad; Pierre Gentine; Kentaro Aida; Jun Asanuma; S. Bircher; Todd G. Caldwell; Andreas Colliander; Michael H. Cosh; C. D. Holifield Collins; Thomas J. Jackson; Heather McNairn; Anna Pacheco; M. Thibeault; Jeffrey P. Walker
A Neural Network (NN) algorithm was developed to estimate global surface soil moisture for April 2015 to March 2017 with a 2-3 day repeat frequency using passive microwave observations from the Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) satellite, surface soil temperatures from the NASA Goddard Earth Observing System Model version 5 (GEOS-5) land modeling system, and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer-based vegetation water content. The NN was trained on GEOS-5 soil moisture target data, making the NN estimates consistent with the GEOS-5 climatology, such that they may ultimately be assimilated into this model without further bias correction. Evaluated against in situ soil moisture measurements, the average unbiased root mean square error (ubRMSE), correlation and anomaly correlation of the NN retrievals were 0.037 m3m-3, 0.70 and 0.66, respectively, against SMAP core validation site measurements and 0.026 m3m-3, 0.58 and 0.48, respectively, against International Soil Moisture Network (ISMN) measurements. At the core validation sites, the NN retrievals have a significantly higher skill than the GEOS-5 model estimates and a slightly lower correlation skill than the SMAP Level-2 Passive (L2P) product. The feasibility of the NN method was reflected by a lower ubRMSE compared to the L2P retrievals as well as a higher skill when ancillary parameters in physically-based retrievals were uncertain. Against ISMN measurements, the skill of the two retrieval products was more comparable. A triple collocation analysis against Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) and Advanced Scatterometer (ASCAT) soil moisture retrievals showed that the NN and L2P retrieval errors have a similar spatial distribution, but the NN retrieval errors are generally lower in densely vegetated regions and transition zones.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2017
S. Chan; Rajat Bindlish; Peggy E. O'Neill; Thomas J. Jackson; Julian Chaubell; Jeffrey R. Piepmeier; S. Dunbar; Andreas Colliander; F. Chen; Dara Entekhabi; Simon H. Yueh; M. Cosh; Todd G. Caldwell; Jeffrey P. Walker; Xiaoling Wu; Aaron A. Berg; Tracy L. Rowlandson; Anna Pacheco; Heather McNairn; M. Thibeault; Ángel González-Zamora; Ernesto Lopez-Baeza; F. Uldall; Mark S. Seyfried; David D. Bosch; Patrick J. Starks; C. D. Holifield Collins; John H. Prueger; Zhongbo Su; R. van der Velde
Since the beginning of its routine science operation in March 2015, the NASA SMAP observatory has been returning interference-mitigated brightness temperature observations at L-band (1.41 GHz) frequency from space. The resulting data enable frequent global mapping of soil moisture with a retrieval uncertainty below 0.040 m3/m3 at a 36 km spatial scale. This paper describes the development and validation of an enhanced version of the current standard soil moisture product. Compared with the standard product that is posted on a 36 km grid, the new enhanced product is posted on a 9 km grid. Derived from the same time-ordered brightness temperature observations that feed the current standard passive soil moisture product, the enhanced passive soil moisture product leverages on the Backus-Gilbert optimal interpolation technique that more fully utilizes the additional information from the original radiometer observations to achieve global mapping of soil moisture with enhanced clarity. The resulting enhanced soil moisture product was assessed using long-term in situ soil moisture observations from core validation sites located in diverse biomes and was found to exhibit an average retrieval uncertainty below 0.040 m3/m3. As of December 2016, the enhanced soil moisture product has been made available to the public from the NASA Distributed Active Archive Center at the National Snow and Ice Data Center.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2015
M. Thibeault; J. M. Cáceres; D. Dadamia; A. G. Soldano; M. Uriburu Quirno; J. M. Guerrieri; R. Edrosa; M. Palomeque; L. Romaldi; Julian Pucheta; J. Mogadouro; E. De Luca; S. Bustos; S. Agüero; I. Pascual; M. Mariotti
In order to help in the calibration process of the soil moisture map produced by current (SMAP) and future (SAOCOM) missions, a dense network of automatic soil-moisture probes has been set in Monte Buey (Córdoba, Argentina). A series of intensive calibration campaigns were done over the last two years to calibrate the sensors and validate the soil moisture map at various scales. Some of the results are presented here.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2017
Rajat Bindlish; Thomas J. Jackson; Michael H. Cosh; Toshio Koike; X. Fuiji; R.A.M. de Jeu; S. Chan; Jun Asanuma; Aaron A. Berg; David D. Bosch; Todd G. Caldwell; C. Holyfield Collins; Heather McNairn; John H. Prueger; Mark S. Seyfried; Patrick J. Starks; Zhongbo Su; M. Thibeault; Jeffrey P. Walker
The Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) is part of the Global Change Observation Mission-Water (GCOM-W) mission. AMSR2 fills the void left by the loss of the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer-Earth Observing System (AMSR-E) after almost 10 years. Both missions provide brightness temperature observations that are used to retrieve soil moisture. Merging AMSR-E and AMSR2 will help build a consistent long-term dataset. Before tackling the integration of AMSR-E and AMSR2 it is necessary to conduct a thorough validation and assessment of the AMSR2 soil moisture products. This study focuses on validation of the AMSR2 soil moisture products by comparison with in situ reference data from a set of core validation sites. Three products that rely on different algorithms were evaluated; the JAXA Soil Moisture Algorithm (JAXA), the Land Parameter Retrieval Model (LPRM), and the Single Channel Algorithm (SCA). Results indicate that overall the SCA has the best performance based upon the metrics considered.
international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2017
Peggy E. O'Neill; S. Chan; Rajat Bindlish; Thomas J. Jackson; Andreas Colliander; Scott Dunbar; Fan Chen; Jeffrey R. Piepmeier; Simon H. Yueh; Dara Entekhabi; Michael H. Cosh; Todd G. Caldwell; Jeffrey P. Walker; Xiaoling Wu; Aaron A. Berg; Tracy L. Rowlandson; Anna Pacheco; Heather McNairn; M. Thibeault; Ángel González-Zamora; Ernesto Lopez-Baeza; F. Udall; Mark S. Seyfried; David D. Bosch; Patrick J. Starks; C. Holifield; John H. Prueger; Zhongbo Su; R. van der Velde; Jun Asanuma
NASAs Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission launched on January 31, 2015 into a sun-synchronous 6 am/6 pm orbit with an objective to produce global mapping of high-resolution soil moisture and freeze-thaw state every 2–3 days. The SMAP radiometer began acquiring routine science data on March 31, 2015 and continues to operate nominally. SMAPs radiometer-derived standard soil moisture product (L2SMP) provides soil moisture estimates posted on a 36-km fixed Earth grid using brightness temperature observations and ancillary data. A beta quality version of L2SMP was released to the public in October, 2015, Version 3 validated L2SMP soil moisture data were released in May, 2016, and Version 4 L2SMP data were released in December, 2016. Version 4 data are processed using the same soil moisture retrieval algorithms as previous versions, but now include retrieved soil moisture from both the 6 am descending orbits and the 6 pm ascending orbits. Validation of 19 months of the standard L2SMP product was done for both AM and PM retrievals using in situ measurements from global core cal/val sites. Accuracy of the soil moisture retrievals averaged over the core sites showed that SMAP accuracy requirements are being met.