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Author(s) (2010), Title, Abstract xxxxx-xxxx presented at 2010 Fall
Meeting, AGU, San Francisco, Calif., 13-17
Dec.
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HR: 1340h AN: H33F-1222
Poster TI: SMOS ground validation in
Australia : results from summer and winter campaigns AU: *Rudiger, C EM: crudiger@unimelb.edu.au AF: Dept. of
Civil Engineering, Monash University, Clayton, VIC,
Australia AU: Walker, J P EM: jeff.walker@monash.edu AF: Dept. of
Civil Engineering, Monash University, Clayton, VIC,
Australia AU: Kerr, Y H EM: yann.kerr@cesbio.cnes.fr AF: Cesbio,
Toulouse, France AU: Kim, E J EM: ed.kim@nasa.gov AF: NASA - Goddard,
Greenbelt, MD, USA AB: With the recent launch of
the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission the remote sensing
community is becoming engaged in airborne campaigns for their validation.
This study covers two aspects, the actual ground validation and also the
requirements of spatial coverage. Both campaigns covered an extensive area
of up to 20 independent SMOS footprints and the relationship of the large
scale averages with the SMOS observations is presented here. The latter
point is necessary, given the financial and logistical constraints on the
area that can be covered by airborne simulators, giving scientifically
sound advice on the fractional footprint coverage requirements by
campaigns for these low resolution sensors a paramount importance. Using
high resolution airborne data from two extensive airborne campaigns in
south-eastern Australia the fractional coverage requirement for L-band
passive microwave satellite missions is assessed using a sub-sampling
technique of the flight lines through a passive microwave footprint. It is
shown that a minimum 50% coverage of the total footprint size will
typically be required to ensure that the correct footprint mean is
estimated with an expected sampling error of less than 4K; the design
sensitivity of SMOS. DE: [1855] HYDROLOGY /
Remote sensing DE: [1866] HYDROLOGY / Soil
moisture SC: Hydrology (H) MN: 2010 Fall Meeting
HR: 0815h AN: H31K-02 TI: The Soil Moisture Active
Passive Experiments (SMAPEx) for SMAP Algorithm Development
(Invited) AU: *Panciera, R EM:
panr@unimelb.edu.au AF: Civil and
Environmental Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC,
Australia AU: Walker, J P EM: jeff.walker@monash.edu AF: Civil
Engineering, Monash university, Melbourne, VIC, Australia AU:
Ryu, D EM: dryu@unimelb.edu.au AF: Civil and
Environmental Engineering, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, VIC,
Australia AU: Gray, D EM: dgray@eleceng.adelaide.adu.au AF: School
of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University of Adelaide,
Adelaide, VIC, Australia AU: Jackson, T
J EM: tom.jackson@ars.usda.gov AF:
Hydrology and Remote Sensing Laboratory, United States
Department of Agriculture, Beltsville, VIC, Australia AU: Yardley, H EM: hyardley@eleceng.adelaide.adu.au AF: School of Electrical and Electronic Engineering, The University
of Adelaide, Adelaide, VIC, Australia AB: The
availability of global L-band observations from passive (the recently
launched SMOS), and active (such as the PALSAR) microwave sensors has
boosted the interest in making joint use of the two techniques to improve
the retrieval of global near-surface soil moisture at unprecedented
resolutions. The Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission (scheduled
launch, 2014) will fully exploit this synergy by providing concurrent
active (radar) and passive (radiometer) microwave observations, resulting
in passive-only, active-only and a merged active-passive soil moisture
products at spatial resolutions of respectively 40km, 3km and 9km. The
Soil Moisture Active Passive Experiments (SMAPEx) are a series of airborne
field experiments specifically designed for algorithm development for SMAP
and currently ongoing in the context of the SMAP pre-launch cal/val
activities for Australia. Four SMAPEx campaigns are scheduled across the
2010-2011 seasonal cycle, with the first campaign (SMAPEx-1) successfully
conducted on moderately wet winter conditions (July 5-10, 2010) and the
second campaign (SMAPEx-2), scheduled for the summer (December 4-8,2010).
SMAPEx is making use of a novel SMAP airborne simulator, including an
L-band radar and radiometer to collect SMAP-like data over a well
monitored semi-arid agricultural area in the Murrumbidgee catchment in
south-eastern Australia. High resolution radar and radiometer observations
collected during SMAPEx are supported by extensive ground sampling of soil
moisture and ancillary data, allowing for testing of a variety of
algorithms over semi-arid agricultural areas, typical of the Australian
environment but similar to large areas of the central continental USA,
including radiometer-only, radar-only, merged active-passive, downscaling
and radar change-detection algorithms. In this paper a preliminary
assessment of the performance of the radar-only and radiometer-only
retrieval algorithms proposed as baseline for SMAP is presented. The soil
moisture retrieved from active and passive microwave airborne observations
collected during the SMAPEx-1 campaign is compared with extensive spatial
data collected at focus areas. The quality of the individual retrievals is
discussed in relation with different land surface conditions, ranging from
intensive cropping to dryland grassland areas. DE: [1866] HYDROLOGY / Soil moisture DE: [6969] RADIO SCIENCE / Remote sensing SC: Hydrology (H) MN: 2010 Fall
Meeting