1 / 38

Land Surface Microwave Emissivity: Uncertainties, Dynamics and Modeling

Land Surface Microwave Emissivity: Uncertainties, Dynamics and Modeling Yudong Tian, Christa Peters-Lidard, Ken Harrison, Sujay Kumar and Sarah Ringerud http://lis.gsfc.nasa.gov/PMM/ Sponsored by NASA PMM Program (PI: C. Peters-Lidard). Outline

orrick
Télécharger la présentation

Land Surface Microwave Emissivity: Uncertainties, Dynamics and Modeling

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Land Surface Microwave Emissivity: Uncertainties, Dynamics and Modeling Yudong Tian, Christa Peters-Lidard, Ken Harrison, Sujay Kumar and Sarah Ringerud http://lis.gsfc.nasa.gov/PMM/ Sponsored by NASA PMM Program (PI: C. Peters-Lidard)

  2. Outline 1. Why does land surface microwave emissivity matter? 2. How much do we know of microwave emissivity? 3. Modeling land surface emissivity (bottom-up) 4. Observations of emissivity dynamics (top-down) 5. Where do we meet? Where to go from there?

  3. Microwave emissivity contains rich information of terrestrial states Emissivity×Tsfc Vegetation (e.g., Choudhury et al., 1987; Owe et al., 2001; Joseph et al., 2010; Kurum et al, 2012) Snow (e.g., Pulliainen et al, 1999; Tedesco and Kim, 2006; Foster et al., 2009) Soil moisture (e.g., Njoku and O’Neill, 1982; O’Neill et al., 2011)

  4. Land surface emissivity is also a noise (Skofronick-Jackson and Johnson, 2011) <- land surface | rain | light rain, snowfall -> False rain events 3B42V6 CMORPH (Tian and Peters-Lidard, 2007)

  5. There are large uncertainties in emissivity retrievals Sahara desert, V-pol Amazon rainforest, V-pol (Tian et al., 2012)

  6. Land surface microwave emissivity can be modeled -- a layered, bottom-up approach -- a semi-physical, semi-empirical business Vegetation: tau-omega model (e.g., Mo et al., 1982; Owe et al., 2001) Snow: HUT model (e.g., Pulliainen et al, 1999; Tedesco and Kim, 2006) Surface roughness: (e.g., Choudhury et al., 1979) Bare, smooth soil: Dielectric constant -> Fresnel equation -> emissivity (e.g., Wang and Schmugge, 1980)

  7. Modeling emissivity: coupling LIS with two emissivity models 1. CRTM (Weng et al., 2001) 2. CMEM (Holmes et al., 2008)

  8. Emissivity and its dynamics are driven by land surface states

  9. Global simulations of microwave emissivity Global emissivity can now be modeled, but how to validate? Sahara desert, V-pol Amazon rainforest, V-pol

  10. Emissivity dynamics can be captured by a soil moisture-vegetation phase diagram Leaf Area Index (LAI) Amazon HMT-E soil moisture content (SMC) SGPP

  11. Differences in RTMs can be easily seen in phase diagrams CRTM emissivity CMEM emissivity

  12. Understanding global microwave emissivity dynamics • Methodology : • “Understanding emissivity without using emissivity data”

  13. Understanding microwave emissivity dynamics • Data: AMSR-E Tb, 2004-2010 (7 years) at 0.25-deg resolution • How to “understanding emissivity without using emissivity data” • -- Construct surface-sensitive indices from Tb observations

  14. Three indices used to detect land surface dynamics • Index 1: Microwave Polarization Difference Index (MPDI) at 10.6 GHz • Index 2: Tb36V • Index 3: Tb18V-Tb36V • MPDI: sensitive to surface radiometric properties other than Ts • Tb36V: sensitive to surface temperature (Ts) • Tb18V-Tb36V: sensitive to scattering materials (e.g., dry snow)

  15. Tb-based MPDI is close to emissivity-based MPDI at lower frequencies Tb-based MPDI: Emissivity-based: Emissivity-based mpdi

  16. MPDI phase diagram reveals model behavior ASMR-E MPDI CRTM mpdi CMEM mpdi

  17. Global survey of microwave emission dynamics

  18. Microwave emission dynamic regimes shift with season

  19. Regime diagram also reveals model behavior 21

  20. Validating modeled global emissivity and its dynamics -- Seasonal mean Challenging areas: Deserts Mountains Snow, ice and glaciers 22

  21. Validating modeled global emissivity and its dynamics -- Standard deviation 23

  22. Summary 1. Land surface microwave emissivity is critical 2. Large uncertainties in our knowledge of its dynamics 3. Modeling land surface emissivity with LIS+RTM 4. Models quantitatively and qualitatively validated

  23. Where to go from here: Model improvement: Quantitative: parameter tuning Qualitative: desert, snow, mountains Improved model can help: -- Surface variable retrieval (e.g., soil moisture) -- Atmospheric retrieval (e.g., precipitation) -- Radiance-based data assimilation 3. Higher frequencies still a challenge

  24. Microwave emission dynamics from a global perspective

  25. Tb-based MPDI is close to emissivity-based MPDI at lower frequencies Tb-based MPDI: Emissivity-based: Emissivity-based mpdi

  26. Summary 1. Land surface emissivity dynamics is complex -- Surface types -- Seasonality -- Dissimilar dynamics over similar surfaces 2. Regime diagrams and phase diagrams facilitate: -- model validation -- model tuning in the absence of “truth” To do: -- Model parameter tuning and capability enhancement

  27. Extra slides

  28. Modeling microwave emissivity and its dynamics Start with site with more reliable auxiliary data: precipitation, soil moisture … + field campaigns

  29. Similar climatic/ecological surfaces may have different dynamics

  30. Microwave emission dynamics from a global perspective • Land surfaces only

  31. Similar climatic/ecological surfaces may not have similar MW emission dynamics

  32. Microwave emission dynamics from a global perspective

  33. Microwave emission dynamic regimes shift with season

  34. SMC LAI 19G Snapshots of soil moisture, LAI and emissivity at various episodes wet/sparse wet/med dense dry/sparse wet/dense med dry/dense

  35. Modeling and Predicting Land Surface Emissivity at NASA GSFC • Campaign data of critical importance: • Will serve (we hope) as reliable benchmark to tune the coupled LSM-EM forward model • Adjudicate satellite-derived inversion- and forward model-based estimates • Test the latest science related to microwave radiative transfer • Test accuracy of lower-dimensional approximations to the emissivity dynamics • In addition, we will be contributing to database to augment with ancillary in situ data Parameters Spatial Resolution Satellite Sensors Reference & Contact Leaf Area Index (LAI) 1km Terra/Aqua MODIS U. Boston (Myneni et al. 2002) Soil moisture 25km Aqua AMSR-E NSIDC (Njoku 2007) Snow cover 500m Terra/Aqua MODIS NASA GSFC (Hall et al. 2002) Snow water equivalent 25km Aqua AMSR-E NSIDC (Kelly et al. 2004)

  36. How similar are different surfaces? For a given snow-free land surface, the emissivity variability is largely controlled by two dynamic variables: soil moisture (SMC) and vegetation water content (VWC) -- LAI (leaf area index) can serve as a proxy for VWC -- SMC –LAI phase diagram

More Related