Abstract

Two different forms of machine learning – an artificial neural network (ANN) and a support vector machine (SVM) – are used to estimate passive microwave (PMW) brightness temperatures (Tb) as observed by the special sensor microwave imager (SSM/I) satellite sensor over snow- covered land in North America. Both techniques reasonably reproduce unbiased estimates of SSM/I observations at 19.35 and 37.0 GHz for both vertically- and horizontally-polarized channels. When compared against SSM/I observations not used during training, domain-averaged statistics from 1 September 1987 to 1 September 2002 yielded a root mean squared error (RMSE) of less than 9 K for all frequency and polarization combinations examined in this study. Even though both ML techniques reasonably reproduced SSM/I Tb observations, the SVM outperformed the ANN because the SVM: (1) better captured the high-frequency (i.e. day-to-day) temporal characteristics in the Tb observations across the majority of the study domain, (2) better reproduced the spatial variability as a function of snow classification, and (3) yielded greater sensitivity to snow-related input variables during the estimation of PMW Tb. These findings reinforce previous research of SVM-based estimation of PMW Tb employing observations from the advanced microwave scanning radiometer.

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