Spatial and temporal variability of root-zone soil moisture acquired from hydrologic modeling and AirMOSS P-band radar

IEEE J Sel Top Appl Earth Obs Remote Sens. 2018 Dec;11(12):4578-4590. doi: 10.1109/jstars.2018.2865251. Epub 2018 Dec 24.

Abstract

The accurate estimation of grid-scale fluxes of water, energy, and carbon requires consideration of sub-grid spatial variability in root-zone soil moisture (RZSM). The NASA Airborne Microwave Observatory of Subcanopy and Subsurface (AirMOSS) mission represents the first systematic attempt to repeatedly map high-resolution RZSM fields using airborne remote sensing across a range of biomes. Here we compare 3-arc-sec (~100-m) spatial resolution AirMOSS RZSM retrievals from P-band radar acquisitions over 9 separate North American study sites with analogous RZSM estimates generated by the Flux-Penn State Hydrology Model (Flux-PIHM). The two products demonstrate comparable levels of accuracy when evaluated against ground-based soil moisture products and a significant level of temporal cross-correlation. However, relative to the AirMOSS RZSM retrievals, Flux-PIHM RZSM estimates generally demonstrate much lower levels of spatial and temporal variability, and the spatial patterns captured by both products are poorly correlated. Nevertheless, based on a discussion of likely error sources affecting both products, it is argued that the spatial analysis of AirMOSS and Flux-PIHM RZSM fields provide meaningful upper and lower bounds on the potential range of RZSM spatial variability encountered across a range of natural biomes.

Keywords: Soil moisture; hydrologic modelling; radar remote sensing and spatial scaling.