Abstract
Physically based land surface process/radiobrightness (LSP/R) models may characterize well the relationship between radiometric signatures and surface parameters. They can be used to develop and improve the means of sensing surface parameters by microwave radiometry. However, due to a lack in the skill to properly understand the behavior of the data, a statistical approach is often adopted. In this paper, we present the retrieval of wheat plant water content (PWC) and soil moisture content (SMC) profiles from the measured H-polarized and V-polarized brightness temperatures at 1.4 (L-band), and 10.65 (X-band) GHz by an error propagation learning back propagation (EPLBP) neural network. The PWC is defined as the total water content in the vegetation. The brightness temperatures were taken by the PORTOS radiometer over wheat fields through three month growth cycles in 1993 (PORTOS-93) and 1996 (PORTOS-96). Note that, through the neural network, there is no requirement of ancillary information on the complex surface parameters such as vegetation biomass, surface temperature, and surface roughness, etc. During both field campaigns, the L-band radiometer was used to measure brightness temperatures at incident angles from 0 to 50/spl deg/ at L-band and at an incident angle of 50/spl deg/ at X-band. The SMC profiles were measured to the depths of 10 cm in 1993 and 5 cm in 1996. The wheat was sampled approximately once a week in 1993 and 1996 to obtain its dry and wet biomass (i.e., PWC). The EPLBP neural network was trained with observations randomly chosen from the PORTOS-93 data, and evaluated by the remaining data from the same set. The trained neural network is further evaluated with the PORTOS-96 data.
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More From: IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
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