Coupled Retrieval of the Three Phases of Water from Spaceborne Imaging
Spectroscopy Measurements
Abstract
Measurements of reflected solar radiation by imaging spectrometers allow
to quantify water in different states (solid, liquid, gas) thanks to the
discriminative absorption lines in the solar spectrum. We developed a
retrieval method to quantify the amount of water in each of the three
states from spaceborne imaging spectroscopy data, such as those from the
German EnMAP mission. Our retrieval couples atmospheric radiative
transfer simulations from the MODTRAN5 radiative transfer code to a
surface reflectance model based on the Beer-Lambert law. The model is
inverted on a per-pixel basis using a maximum likelihood estimation
formalism. Based on a unique coupling of the canopy reflectance model
HySimCaR and the EnMAP end-to-end simulation tool EeteS, we performed a
sensitivity analysis by comparing the retrieved values with the
simulation input leading to an R2 of 0.991 for water vapor and 0.965 for
liquid water. Furthermore, we applied our algorithm to airborne AVIRIS-C
data to demonstrate the ability to map snow/ice extents as well as to a
CHRIS-PROBA dataset for which concurrent field measurements of canopy
water content were available. The comparison between our retrievals and
the ground measurements showed an overall R2 of 0.80 for multiple crop
types and a remarkable clustering in the regression analysis indicating
a dependency of the retrieved water content from the physical structure
of the vegetation. In addition, our algorithm is able to produce
smoother and more physically-plausible water vapor maps than the ones
from the band ratio approaches used for multispectral data, since biases
due to background reflectance are reduced. The demonstrated potential of
imaging spectroscopy to provide accurate quantitative measures of water
from space will be further exploited using upcoming spaceborne imaging
spectroscopy missions like PRISMA or EnMAP.