Abstract

Land surface temperature (LST) is a fundamental physical quantity in a range of different studies, for example in climatological analyses and surface–atmosphere heat flux assessments, especially in heterogeneous and complex surfaces such as vegetated canopies. To obtain accurate LST values, it is important to measure accurately the land surface emissivity (LSE) in the thermal infrared spectrum. In the past decades, different directional emissivity canopy models have been proposed. This paper evaluates six radiative transfer models (FR97, Mod3, Rmod3, 4SAIL, REN15, and CE-P models) through a comparison with in situ emissivity measurements performed using the temperature-emissivity separation (TES) method. The evaluation is done using a single set of rose plants over two different soils with very different spectral behavior. First, using an organic soil, the measurements were done for seven different observation angles, from 0° to 60° in steps of 10°, and for six different values of leaf area index (LAI). Taking into account all LAIs, the bias (and root mean square error, RMSE) obtained were 0.003 (±0.006), −0.004 (±0.005), −0.009 (±0.011), 0.005 (±0.007), 0.004 (±0.007), and 0.005 (±0.007) for FR97, Mod3, Rmod3, 4SAIL, REN 15, and CE-P models, respectively. Second, using an inorganic soil, the measurements were done for six different LAIs but for two different observation angles: 0° and 55°. The bias (and RMSE) obtained were 0.012 (±0.014), 0.004 (±0.007), −0.020 (±0.035), 0.016 (±0.017), 0.013 (±0.015), 0.013 (±0.015) and for FR97, Mod3, Rmod3, 4SAIL, REN15, and CE-P models, respectively. Overall, the Mod3 model appears as the best model in comparison to the TES emissivity reference measurements.

Highlights

  • Land surface temperature (LST) is a fundamental physical quantity in a range of diverse studies on physical phenomena, such as climatological analyses, surface-atmosphere heat energy interactions, to mention some examples [1,2]

  • The limit emissivity reached with each soil is the same, since there is no effect of soil emissivity on the limit emissivity retrieval [22,27], closer values to the limit emissivity were obtained for the organic soil for leaf area index (LAI) values lower than for the inorganic soil

  • The soil emissivity has no impact on the canopy limit emissivity, but it does on the value of emissivity for high LAIs analyzed in this study

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Summary

Introduction

Land surface temperature (LST) is a fundamental physical quantity in a range of diverse studies on physical phenomena, such as climatological analyses, surface-atmosphere heat energy interactions (e.g., evapotranspiration), to mention some examples [1,2]. Atmospheric and surface emissivity corrections are the main factors that affect an accurate retrieval of LST for data acquired from satellite sensors in the thermal infrared spectrum (TIR). A precise characterization of the land surface emissivity (LSE) is important for the LST retrieval [3]. The emissivity spectrum is a characteristic feature of each surface, so it could be used to differentiate between different soil classes [4,5], vegetated species [6,7], and other surfaces, such as inland waters or manmade materials. A number of previous works have analyzed the dependence of soil emissivity on viewing angle [8,9,10]

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