985
Table 2. Summary of data acquisition and on-site field measurements during the WG’92 Experiment,
where DOY=day of year 1992, TM=Landsat Thematic Mapper, ERS-1=ERS-1 Synthetic Aperture
Radar, OD=atmospheric optical depth, RP=radiosonde atmospheric profile, VS=vegetation
measurements at 2-6 sites, SM=gravimetric soil moisture at 4 sites, STR=ground- (G) and aircraft-
based (A) measurements of surface temperature and reflectance. Taken from Moran et aL (1993).
DOY
Date
Weather
TM
ERS-l
VS
OD
RP
SM
STR
114
23 Apr
Marginal
yes
25 Apr
21-23 Apr
yes
yes
yes
G
130
9 May
Clear
14 May
yes
yes
yes
G
146
25 May
Cloudy
27-28 May
yes
yes
G
162
10 Jun
Clear
yes
18 Jun
yes
yes
yes
G
178
26 Jun
Clear
yes
22-23 Jun
yes
yes
G
194
12 Jul
Clear
yes
14-15 Jul
yes
G
210
28 Jul
Cloudy
28 Jul
yes
yes
G&A
224
11 Aug
Clear
11-12 Aug
yes
G
226
13 Aug
Marginal
yes
13 Aug
yes
yes
yes
G
242
29 Aug
Cloudy
27 Aug
yes
250
6 Sep
Clear
yes
G&A
251
7 Sep
Clear
yes
G&A
258
14 Sep
Cloudy
15-16 Sep
yes
A
274
30 Sep
Clear
yes
1 Oct
30 Sep
yes
yes
yes
G&A
290
16 Oct
Clear
16 Oct
16-17 Oct
yes
yes
yes
G&A
306
1 Nov
Clear
yes
yes
yes
yes
G&A
322
17 Nov
Clear
yes
18-20 Nov
yes
yes
yes
G&A
In the following discussion, research results from Monsoon’90 and WG’92 have been grouped into the five
components illustrated in Figure 1. Most of the citations in the next sections are from an upcoming special issue
of Water Resources Research, dedicated to the research results of the Monsoon’90 Experiment (Kustas and
Goodrich, 1994).
3.1. Storm Model and Storm Inputs (boxes 1 and 5 of Figure 1).
The analysis of Monsoon’90 data for storm modeling has focused on implementation of a distributed, physically-
based rainfall-runoff model (KJNEROS, Woolhiser et al., 1990) at the small catchment (4.4 ha) and medium
catchment (631 ha) scales. Goodrich et al. (1994) utilized soil moisture determined by airborne passive
microwave instruments, ground-based observations and from a simple water balance model to define prestorm
initial soil water content for KJNEROS. For a small and medium-sized catchment, it appeared that a basin wide
average initial soil water content was sufficient for runoff simulations. This result suggests that satellite-based
microwave systems which suffer from low resolution may still provide acceptable pre-storm soil moisture data
for computing runoff in this environment. On the other hand, this study also showed that detailed information
of the rainfall distribution was critical for accurate runoff simulation.
3.2. Interstorm Model and Interstorm Inputs (boxes 2 and 4 of Figure 1).
3.2.1. Basic Correction and Pre-processing of Remotely Sensed Data. The Monsoon’90 and WG’92
experiments provided the data sets necessary to document the potential errors in atmospheric correction of optical