Abstract

Microwave remote sensing is one of the most promising tools for soil moisture estimation owing to its high sensitivity to dielectric properties of the target. Many ground-based scatterometer experiments were carried out for exploring this potential. After the launch of ERS-1, expectation was generated to operationally retrieve large area soil moisture information. However, along with its strong sensitivity to soil moisture, SAR is also sensitive to other parameters like surface roughness, crop cover and soil texture. Single channel SAR was found to be inadequate to resolve the effects of these parameters. Low and high incidence angle RADARSAT-1 SAR was exploited for resolving these effects and incorporating the effects of surface roughness and crop cover in the soil moisture retrieval models. Since the moisture and roughness should remain unchanged between low and high angle SAR acquisition, the gap period between the two acquisitions should be minimum. However, for RADARSAT-1 the gap is typically of the order of 3 days. To overcome this difficulty, simultaneously acquired ENVISAT-1 ASAR HH/VV and VV/VH data was studied for operational soil moisture estimation. Cross-polarised SAR data has been exploited for its sensitivity to vegetation for crop-covered fields where as co-pol ratio has been used to incorporate surface roughness for the case of bare soil. Although there has not been any multi-frequency SAR system onboard a satellite platform, efforts have also been made to understand soil moisture sensitivity and penetration capability at different frequencies using SIR-C/X-SAR and multi-parametric Airborne SAR data. This paper describes multi-incidence angle, multi-polarised and multi-frequency SAR approaches for soil moisture retrieval over large agricultural area.

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