Abstract

With the increasing utilization of satellite-based soil moisture products, a primary challenge is knowing their accuracy and robustness. This study presents a comprehensive assessment over China of three widely used global satellite soil moisture products, i.e., Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP), European Space Agency (ESA) Climate Change Initiative (CCI) Soil Moisture, Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS). In situ soil moisture from 1682 stations and Variable Infiltration Capacity (VIC) model are used to evaluate the performance of SMAP_L3, ESA_CCI_SM_COMBINED, SMOS_CATDS_L3 from 31 March 2015 to 3 June 2018. The Triple Collocation (TC) approach is used to minimize the uncertainty (e.g., scale issue) during the validation process. The TC analysis is conducted using three triplets, i.e., [SMAP-Insitu-VIC], [CCI-Insitu-VIC], [SMOS-Insitu-VIC]. In general, SMAP is the most reliable product, reflecting the main spatiotemporal characteristics of soil moisture, while SMOS has the lowest accuracy. The results demonstrate that the overall root mean square error of SMAP, CCI, SMOS is 0.040, 0.028, 0.107 m3m−3, respectively. The overall temporal correlation coefficient of SMAP, CCI, SMOS is 0.68, 0.65, 0.38, respectively. The overall fractional root mean square error of SMAP, CCI, SMOS is 0.707, 0.750, 0.897, respectively. In irrigated areas, the accuracy of CCI is reduced due to the land surface model (which does not consider irrigation) used for the rescaling of the CCI_COMBINED soil moisture product during the merging process, while SMAP and SMOS preserve the irrigation signal. The quality of SMOS is most strongly impacted by land surface temperature, vegetation, and soil texture, while the quality of CCI is the least affected by these factors. With the increase of Radio Frequency Interference, the accuracy of SMOS decreases dramatically, followed by SMAP and CCI. Higher representativeness error of in situ stations is noted in regions with higher topographic complexity. This study helps to provide a guideline for the application of satellite soil moisture products in scientific research and gives some references (e.g., modify data algorithm according to the main error sources) for improving the data quality.

Highlights

  • Soil moisture is a key surface state variable in land-atmosphere interactions [1], controlling water fluxes [2,3], energy fluxes [4,5] and carbon exchange [6,7]

  • Considering the long-term dataset length required for climate research, the European Space Agency (ESA) project consortium merged a selection of these individual satellite soil moisture products together into one product namely Climate Change Initiative (CCI) soil moisture product [1,22], reference Section 2.3 for more details

  • The performance of Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) is consistent with the study by Chen et al [27], which has an averaged R of 0.76 globally while the performance of R in China is worse than other countries

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Soil moisture is a key surface state variable in land-atmosphere interactions [1], controlling water fluxes (e.g., runoff, evapotranspiration, infiltration) [2,3], energy fluxes (e.g., latent and sensible heat flux) [4,5] and carbon exchange [6,7]. Soil moisture can be obtained through in situ measurement, land surface model simulation and remote sensing retrieval [11,12,13]. Examples of active remote sensing satellites are the Advanced Scatterometer (ASCAT) series on METOP-A, METOP-B, METOP-C launched by European Space Agency (ESA) in 2006, 2012, 2018, respectively [15,18]. Examples of passive remote sensing satellites are Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) launched by ESA in 2009 [4], Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) launched by Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (JAXA) in 2012 [19,20], and Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) launched by National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) in 2015 [14,21]. Considering the long-term dataset length required for climate research, the ESA project consortium merged a selection of these individual satellite soil moisture products together into one product namely Climate Change Initiative (CCI) soil moisture product [1,22], reference Section 2.3 for more details

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call