In: Wagner W., Székely, B. (eds.): ISPRS TC VII Symposium - 100 Years ISPRS, Vienna, Austria, July 5-7, 2010, IAPRS, Vol. XXXVIII, Part 7B
Q 26 50 100 150 200
Figure 1. Study region
2.2 AMSR-E
The AMSR-E instrument provides global microwave
measurements using different bands (56 km for the C band, 38
km for the X band, and 12 km for the Ka band) over two passes:
ascending (1:30 pm) and descending (1:30 am). The Vrije
Universiteit Amsterdam (VUA) AMSR-E soil moisture
products are retrieved from the Land Surface Parameter Model
(LPRM) (Owe et al., 2008). The model is based on a three-
parameter forward retrieval procedure which uses one dual
polarized channel (e.g., C or X band) to optimize soil moisture
and Vegetation Water Content (VWC) (Owe et al., 2008). Land
surface temperature is derived from the vertical polarized Ka
band (e.g., 36.5 GHz). The LPRM parameterizes vegetation
optical depth using Polarization ratios, Microwave Polarization
Difference Index (MPDI) described as
MPDI = (T br -T bH )l(J br +T iH ) (1)
where Tbv and T bH are the brightness temperature at vertical and
horizontal polarizations, respectively.
2.3 MODIS-NDVI
Terrestrial vegetation greatly influences on the energy balance,
hydrologic and biogeochemical cycle on earth. Vegetation can
also serve as an indicator of anthropogenic influences on the
environment (Huete et al., 1999). Vegetation Index (VI) was
developed to understand the roles of vegetation as a contributor
to maintain biophysical systems and as an indicator of global
environmental change (Huete et al., 1999). Many Vis have been
developed, and most of them are expressed as the relationship
between light reflection in the red and near infrared (NIR)
section of the spectrum to separate the landscape into water,
soil, and vegetation (Glenn et al., 2008). Normalized Difference
Vegetation Index (NDVI), one of the most common among
those Vis, was developed by Rouse et al. (1974). There is a
global record of NDVI data since 1981 from Advance Very
High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) mounted on the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA)
satellites. This AVHRR-NDVI is currently inter-calibrated with
NDVI data from the Moderate Resolution Imaging
Spectroradiometer (MODIS) on the terra and aqua satellites
(Glenn et al., 2008). NDVI can be described as (Glenn et al.,
2008):
NDVI = (pNIR- pRed) / ( pNIR+ pRed)
where pNIR and pRed are reflectance values of Near Infrared
and Red light received at the sensors. Recently, Several
researchsers investigated the potential use of MODIS-driven
NDVI to estimate soil moisture with some success (i.e., Schnur
et al., 2010). Based on their suggestions, we tested this
possibility of MODIS-NDVI for estimating soil moisture at the
eight selected sites in Korea. MYD13A2 product from Aqua
satellite with 1km-16 day of spatio-temporal scale was used in
this study.
3. EVALUATION
In this study, we validated the AMSR-E products from land
parameter retrieval model products by National Aeronautics and
Space Administration (NASA) and Vrije Universiteit
Amsterdam (VUA), the Netherlands for ground measurements
from selected Korean monitoring network sites during 2004
study period. The relationship between AMSR-E and MODIS
NDVI was also tested.The ground based measurements were
extracted at Aqua overpass time: 1:30 pm EST to match the
time of the AMSR-E soil moisture products. Figure 2 shows
that there were reasonable temporal patterns respond with
precipitation events (not shown here).
Overall, VUA AMSR-E soil moisture and MODIS NDVI
showed the reasonable agreement with ground based
measurements (RMSE = 8-26% and BIAS = 0-24%) (Table 1).
However, we found that AMSR-E soil moisture products
showed relatively higher temporal variability. These patterns
may likely due to vegetation transmissivity as a function of the
vegetation optical depth. The vegetation tramsmissivity was
very uncertain in densely vegetated areas because microwave
polarization difference indices became very small (Owe et al.,
2001).
y: AMSR-E soil moisture, x: ground based soil moisture
Equation
R 2
BIAS
RMSE
Chuncheon
y= 1.1523X+10.092
0.2031
-22
26
Pyeongchang
y=0.4145x+37.016
0.0436
-24
26
Bonghwa
y=-0.1505x+42.148
0.0032
-16
20
Sangju
y=0.1059x+31.446
0.0215
12
17
Andong
y=0.5569x+22.383
0.0869
-8
11
Cheongsong
y=0.7131x+19.841
0.1195
-14
16
Nonsan
y=0.0473x+36.457
0.0019
0
8
Cheongju
y=0.326x+25.816
0.0996
2
10
Table 1. A comparison of the ground based soil moisture with
AMSR-E soil moisture