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Retrieval of Soil Moisture and Roughness from the Polarimetric Radar ResponseThe main objective of this investigation was the characterization of soil moisture using imaging radars. In order to accomplish this task, a number of intermediate steps had to be undertaken. In this proposal, the theoretical, numerical, and experimental aspects of electromagnetic scattering from natural surfaces was considered with emphasis on remote sensing of soil moisture. In the general case, the microwave backscatter from natural surfaces is mainly influenced by three major factors: (1) the roughness statistics of the soil surface, (2) soil moisture content, and (3) soil surface cover. First the scattering problem from bare-soil surfaces was considered and a hybrid model that relates the radar backscattering coefficient to soil moisture and surface roughness was developed. This model is based on extensive experimental measurements of the radar polarimetric backscatter response of bare soil surfaces at microwave frequencies over a wide range of moisture conditions and roughness scales in conjunction with existing theoretical surface scattering models in limiting cases (small perturbation, physical optics, and geometrical optics models). Also a simple inversion algorithm capable of providing accurate estimates of soil moisture content and surface rms height from single-frequency multi-polarization radar observations was developed. The accuracy of the model and its inversion algorithm is demonstrated using independent data sets. Next the hybrid model for bare-soil surfaces is made fully polarimetric by incorporating the parameters of the co- and cross-polarized phase difference into the model. Experimental data in conjunction with numerical simulations are used to relate the soil moisture content and surface roughness to the phase difference statistics. For this purpose, a novel numerical scattering simulation for inhomogeneous dielectric random surfaces was developed. Finally the scattering problem of short vegetation cover above a rough soil surface was considered. A general scattering model for grass-blades of arbitrary cross section was developed and incorporated in a first order random media model. The vegetation model and the bare-soil model are combined and the accuracy of the combined model is evaluated against experimental observations from a wheat field over the entire growing season. A complete set of ground-truth data and polarimetric backscatter data were collected. Also an inversion algorithm for estimating soil moisture and surface roughness from multi-polarized multi-frequency observations of vegetation-covered ground is developed.
Document ID
19970014647
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Sarabandi, Kamal
(Michigan Univ. Ann Arbor, MI United States)
Ulaby, Fawwaz T.
(Michigan Univ. Ann Arbor, MI United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
April 8, 1997
Subject Category
Communications And Radar
Report/Patent Number
NAS 1.26:204073
NASA-CR-204073
Report Number: NAS 1.26:204073
Report Number: NASA-CR-204073
Accession Number
97N17988
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAGw-2151
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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