Abstract
The methodology of multispectral optical and dual-polarized radar satellite data fusion for soils physical parameters estimation is developed. In particular, the methodology comprises relative permittivity estimation based on the Integral Equation Model (IEM) by using high resolution Sentinel-1 GRDH radar data. The calibration of ε was provided based on the compensation of soil acidity and temperature destabilizing effects. High-resolution multispectral images PlanetScope were used for vegetation indices and thermal emissivity estimation. Both, low-resolution MODIS and medium resolution Landsat-7/8 ETM+/TIRS thermal infrared images were processed in order to estimate ground plane thermodynamic temperature. An investigated approach for the radar signal depolarization compensation is based on local signal deviations and surface roughness estimation. The relief heterogeneity is restored based on the medium-resolution digital terrain elevation model ALOS AWD3D. Aiming to evaluate the accuracy of a soil moisture estimation model designed based on the presented methodology, ground truth measurements were carried out. Specifically, they included soil samples retrieving for the gravimetric soil moisture. In addition, the soil acidity and temperature were measured by applying the GM1312 differential thermometer and WALCOM multifunction device. The estimated parameters and ground truth data were used in order to retrieve the soil moisture based on the multivatiative regression dependence. Root mean square error of soil moisture retrieving was estimated as 4,73 %. Such accuracy is completely acceptable for the soil moisture monitoring of natural-reserved fund territories
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