4.6 Article

SWCTI: Surface Water Content Temperature Index for Assessment of Surface Soil Moisture Status

Journal

SENSORS
Volume 18, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/s18092875

Keywords

Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS); SWCTI; SWCI; VSWI

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Program of China [2017YFC0405806]
  2. National High-Resolution Earth Observation System Projects [08-Y30B07-9001-13/15]

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The vegetation supply water index (VSWI = NDVI/LST) is an effective metric estimating soil moisture in areas with moderate to dense vegetation cover. However, the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) exhibits a long water stress lag and the land surface temperature (LST), sensitive to water stress, does not contribute considerably to surface soil moisture monitoring due to the constraints of the mathematical characteristics of VSWI: LST influences VSWI less when LST value is sufficiently high. This paper mathematically analyzes the characteristics of VSWI and proposes a new operational dryness index (surface water content temperature index, SWCTI) for the assessment of surface soil moisture status. SWCTI uses the surface water content index (SWCI), which provides a more accurate estimation of surface soil moisture than that of NDVI, as the numerator and the modified surface temperature, which has a greater influence on SWCTI than that of LST, as the denominator. The validation work includes comparison of SWCTI with in situ soil moisture and other remote sensing indices. The results show SWCTI demonstrates the highest correlation with in situ soil moisture; the highest correlation R = 0.801 is found between SWCTI and the 0-5 cm soil moisture in a sandy loam. SWCTI is a functional and effective method that has a great potential in surface soil moisture monitoring.

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