Abstract

Abstract. Cosmic-ray neutron sensing (CRNS) is a non-invasive tool for measuring hydrogen pools such as soil moisture, snow or vegetation. The intrinsic integration over a radial hectare-scale footprint is a clear advantage for averaging out small-scale heterogeneity, but on the other hand the data may become hard to interpret in complex terrain with patchy land use. This study presents a directional shielding approach to prevent neutrons from certain angles from being counted while counting neutrons entering the detector from other angles and explores its potential to gain a sharper horizontal view on the surrounding soil moisture distribution. Using the Monte Carlo code URANOS (Ultra Rapid Neutron-Only Simulation), we modelled the effect of additional polyethylene shields on the horizontal field of view and assessed its impact on the epithermal count rate, propagated uncertainties and aggregation time. The results demonstrate that directional CRNS measurements are strongly dominated by isotropic neutron transport, which dilutes the signal of the targeted direction especially from the far field. For typical count rates of customary CRNS stations, directional shielding of half-spaces could not lead to acceptable precision at a daily time resolution. However, the mere statistical distinction of two rates should be feasible.

Highlights

  • 1.1 Cosmic-ray neutron sensing in environmental sciencesIn the past decade, the adoption of cosmic-ray neutron sensing (CRNS) has increased considerably to measure soil water content in hydrological, agricultural and environmental research applications (Zreda et al, 2008)

  • Using the Monte Carlo code URANOS (Ultra Rapid Neutron-Only Simulation), we modelled the effect of additional polyethylene shields on the horizontal field of view and assessed its impact on the epithermal count rate, propagated uncertainties and aggregation time

  • The results demonstrate that directional CRNS measurements are strongly dominated by isotropic neutron transport, which dilutes the signal of the targeted direction especially from the far field

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Summary

Introduction

The adoption of cosmic-ray neutron sensing (CRNS) has increased considerably to measure soil water content in hydrological, agricultural and environmental research applications (Zreda et al, 2008). Such measurements could serve a variety of purposes in both research and enduser applications, for example, to close the water balance in atmospheric or hydrological models (Schreiner-McGraw et al, 2016; Dimitrova-Petrova et al, 2020) and to support irrigation management (Li et al, 2019; Franz et al, 2020) or snow cover analysis (Schattan et al, 2017).

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