Abstract
This work aims to compare the performance of new methods to estimate the Soil Moisture Content (SMC) of bare soils from their spectral signatures in the reflective domain (0.4–2.5 μm) in comparison with widely used spectral indices like Normalized Soil Moisture Index (NSMI) and Water Index SOIL (WISOIL). Indeed, these reference spectral indices use wavelengths located in the water vapour absorption bands and their performance are thus very sensitive to the quality of the atmospheric compensation. To reduce these limitations, two new spectral indices are proposed which wavelengths are defined using the determination matrix tool by taking into account the atmospheric transmission: Normalized Index of Nswir domain for Smc estimatiOn from Linear correlation (NINSOL) and Normalized Index of Nswir domain for Smc estimatiOn from Non linear correlation (NINSON). These spectral indices are completed by two new methods based on the global shape of the soil spectral signatures. These methods are the Inverse Soil semi-Empirical Reflectance model (ISER), using the inversion of an existing empirical soil model simulating the soil spectral reflectance according to soil moisture content for a given soil class, and the convex envelope model, linking the area between the envelope and the spectral signature to the SMC. All these methods are compared using a reference database built with 32 soil samples and composed of 190 spectral signatures with five or six soil moisture contents. Half of the database is used for the calibration stage and the remaining to evaluate the performance of the SMC estimation methods. The results show that the four new methods lead to similar or better performance than the one obtained by the reference indices. The RMSE is ranging from 3.8% to 6.2% and the coefficient of determination R2 varies between 0.74 and 0.91 with the best performance obtained with the ISER model. In a second step, simulated spectral radiances at the sensor level are used to analyse the sensitivity of these methods to the sensor spectral resolution and the water vapour content knowledge. The spectral signatures of the database are then used to simulate the signal at the top of atmosphere with a radiative transfer model and to compute the integrated incident signal representing the spectral radiance measurements of the HYMAP airborne hyperspectral instrument. The sensor radiances are then corrected from the atmosphere by an atmospheric compensation tool to retrieve the surface reflectances. The SMC estimation methods are then applied on the retrieve spectral reflectances. The adaptation of the spectral index wavelengths to the HyMap sensor spectral bands and the application of the convex envelope and ISER models to boarder spectral bands lead to an error on the SMC estimation. The best performance is then obtained with the ISER model (RMSE of 2.9% and R2 of 0.96) while the four other methods lead to quite similar RMSE (from 6.4% to 7.8%) and R2 (between 0.79 and 0.83) values. In the atmosphere compensation processing, an error on the water vapour content is introduced. The most robust methods to water vapour content variations are WISOIL, NINSON, NINSOL and ISER model. The convex envelope model and NSMI index require an accurate estimation of the water vapour content in the atmosphere.
Highlights
Surface soil moisture plays a key role to understand the exchange of water and heat energy between the land surface and the atmosphere through evaporation, to evaluate soil trafficability [1], to characterize plant health [2] or soil texture features like soil organic carbon or clay contents [3,4].Remote sensing techniques have several advantages in comparison with others in situ methods for monitoring Soil Moisture Content (SMC) [5], as they provide better temporal and spatial coverages [6]
The comparison between the estimated SMC by the Inverse Soil semi-Empirical Reflectance model (ISER) model with the validation data set and the measured SMC is illustrated for each a priori soil spectral class in the Table 4
New SMC estimation methods based on soil spectral signatures of the reflective spectral domain
Summary
Remote sensing techniques have several advantages in comparison with others in situ methods (gravimetric, electromagnetic, thermal...) for monitoring Soil Moisture Content (SMC) [5], as they provide better temporal and spatial coverages [6]. The most popular technique to sense soil moisture is based on active microwave sensor. This is due to the high sensitivity of the backscattered signal to the dielectric constant of soil and of its moisture [7]. The quality of the retrieved soil moisture is highly dependent on the surface roughness [7]. Hyperspectral imagery has demonstrated its potential to retrieve the soil moisture but its performance depends on the soil color and texture, the presence of organic material and crusts [7–10]. The penetration depth in the optical domain is significantly lower and can only allow us to quantify the uppermost layer in a soil column
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