Disclaimer: This material is being kept online for historical purposes. Though accurate at the time of publication, it is no longer being updated. The page may contain broken links or outdated information, and parts may not function in current web browsers. Visit the NASA Salinity website for more information.

Science Meetings

Multi-Scale L-Band Brightness Temperature Analysis for Soil Freezing and Thawing Process Study
Roy, A., Royer, A., Derksen, C., Toose, P., Brucker, L., Mialon, A., Lanlois, A., and Kerr, Y.H. (11-Apr-16)

Snow and frozen ground play a crucial role in climatological and hydrological processes, and are key factors in modulating energy, water, and carbon budgets. L-band space-borne missions such as Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP), Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS), and Aquarius have the potential to provide enhanced information on the surface freeze/thaw (F/T) state over northern regions. It is a key parameter for studies of terrestrial hydroclimatology and ecosystem processes. In this presentation, we first present an analysis over Canadian sites of the L-band brightness temperature (TB) variations from SMOS, Aquarius and first SMAP data in order to characterize the freeze/thaw (FT) soil state, including in winter when a dry snow cover exists. The analysis shows that because of the strong permittivity difference between ice and water, the signal at L-band is very sensitive to the F/T state. However for forested sites it was shown that the signal change is more subtle during transitional periods, suggesting that the boreal F/T signal is more ambiguously influenced by the vertical soil-vegetation continuum and its developmental stages following vegetation phenology. Despite the strong sensitivity of the L-Band passive microwave signal to soil F/T, the intensity can vary because of spatially varying contributions from vegetation, soil, lake and snow, and their physical properties. Hence, a second analysis was conducted at local scale from surface-based L-band radiometer measurements in Saskatchewan, Canada during the 2014-2015 fall, winter, and spring. This dataset was used to analyse the effects of frozen soil and snow. The results show that the snow has a non-negligible effect on TB at L-Band. This study brings important information for the development and improvement of F/T algorithm from SMAP and SMOS observations. The work confirms that spaceborn L-Band data can also leads to retrieve other important cryospheric variables such as snow density (Lemmetyinen et al., 2015).