MAO Kebiao, ZUO Zhiyuan, SHEN Xinyi, XU Tongren, GAO Chunyu, LIU Guang. 2018: Retrieval of Land-surface Temperature from AMSR2 Data Using a Deep Dynamic Learning Neural Network. Chinese Geographical Science, 28(1): 1-11. DOI: 10.1007/s11769-018-0930-1
Citation: MAO Kebiao, ZUO Zhiyuan, SHEN Xinyi, XU Tongren, GAO Chunyu, LIU Guang. 2018: Retrieval of Land-surface Temperature from AMSR2 Data Using a Deep Dynamic Learning Neural Network. Chinese Geographical Science, 28(1): 1-11. DOI: 10.1007/s11769-018-0930-1

Retrieval of Land-surface Temperature from AMSR2 Data Using a Deep Dynamic Learning Neural Network

  • It is more difficult to retrieve land surface temperature (LST) from passive microwave remote sensing data than from thermal remote sensing data, because the emissivities in the passive microwave band can change more easily than those in the thermal infrared band. Thus, it is very difficult to build a stable relationship. Passive microwave band emissivities are greatly influenced by the soil moisture, which varies with time. This makes it difficult to develop a general physical algorithm. This paper proposes a method to utilize multiple-satellite, sensors and resolution coupled with a deep dynamic learning neural network to retrieve the land surface temperature from images acquired by the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2), a sensor that is similar to the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer Earth Observing System (AMSR-E). The AMSR-E and MODIS sensors are located aboard the Aqua satellite. The MODIS LST product is used as the ground truth data to overcome the difficulties in obtaining large scale land surface temperature data. The mean and standard deviation of the retrieval error are approximately 1.4° and 1.9° when five frequencies (ten channels, 10.7, 18.7, 23.8, 36.5, 89 V/H GHz) are used. This method can effectively eliminate the influences of the soil moisture, roughness, atmosphere and various other factors. An analysis of the application of this method to the retrieval of land surface temperature from AMSR2 data indicates that the method is feasible. The accuracy is approximately 1.8° through a comparison between the retrieval results with ground measurement data from meteorological stations.
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