Abstract

Inland open water bodies often pose a systematic error source in the passive remote sensing retrievals of soil moisture. Water temperature is a necessary variable used to compute water emissions that is required to be subtracted from satellite observation to yield actual emissions from the land portion, which in turn generates accurate soil moisture retrievals. Therefore, overestimation of soil moisture can often be corrected using concurrent water temperature data in the overall mitigation procedure. In recent years, several data sets of lake water temperature have become available, but their specifications and accuracy have rarely been investigated in the context of passive soil moisture remote sensing on a global scale. For this reason, three lake temperature products were evaluated against in-situ measurements from 2007 to 2011. The data sets include the lake surface water temperature (LSWT) from Global Observatory of Lake Responses to Environmental Change (GloboLakes), the Copernicus Global Land Operations Cryosphere and Water (C-GLOPS), as well as the lake mix-layer temperature (LMLT) from the European Centers for Medium-Range Weather Forecast (ECMWF) ERA5 Land Reanalysis. GloboLakes, C-GLOPS, and ERA5 Land have overall comparable performance with Pearson correlations (R) of 0.87, 0.92 and 0.88 in comparison with in-situ measurements. LSWT products exhibit negative median biases of −0.27 K (GloboLakes) and −0.31 K (C-GLOPS), whereas the median bias of LMLT is 1.56 K. When mapped from their respective native resolutions to a common 9 km Equal-Area Scalable Earth (EASE) Grid 2.0 projection, similar relative performance was observed. LMLT and LSWT data are closer in performance over the 9 km grid cells that exhibit a small range of lake cover fractions (0.05–0.5). Despite comparable relative performance, ERA5 Land shows great advantages in spatial coverage and temporal resolution. In summary, an integrated evaluation on data accuracy, long-term availability, global coverage, temporal resolution, and regular forward processing with modest data latency led us to conclude that LMLT from the ERA5 Land Reanalysis product represents the most optimal path for use in the development of a long-term soil moisture product.

Highlights

  • IntroductionSoil moisture is a critical component of the Earth’s systems, mainly because of its capability to control surface energy fluxes, potentially exchange with the atmosphere, and partitioning precipitation into infiltration and surface runoff in terms of water budget [1,2,3,4]

  • It is expected that any given resampling procedure only has limited effects on degrading quality of lake temperature data sets, especially for ERA5 Land whose native resolution is close to the 9 km Equal-Area Scalable Earth (EASE) grid

  • The accuracy of land surface emissions governs the quality of retrieved soil moisture products, and reasonable partitioning of water and land emissions from satellite-based observations requires accurate estimations of water temperature

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Summary

Introduction

Soil moisture is a critical component of the Earth’s systems, mainly because of its capability to control surface energy fluxes, potentially exchange with the atmosphere, and partitioning precipitation into infiltration and surface runoff in terms of water budget [1,2,3,4]. Given its relatively slow variance, soil moisture has been recognized as an essential variable in climatic studies and numerical weather predictions [1,3]. Knowledge of accurate soil moisture measurements could benefit a variety of applications, ranging from drought monitoring, flood and landslide prevention, agricultural productivity improvements, and Remote Sens. 2021, 13, 1872 weather forecasts [1,2,3]. A global coverage of long-term soil moisture monitoring by in-situ measurements is impractical only from the perspectives of expenditure and manpower required by the operation and maintenance of the associated facilities

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