Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE)
Abstract
After more than 8 years in orbit the Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) satellite is still in good health and several algorithms for improving its spatial resolution have been proposed and validated in a variety of catchments. However, none of them has yet been applied at the global scale. In this article we present: i) a review of the latest SMOS-BEC downscaling algorithm, which allows for its global application using an adaptive moving window and ii) a thorough validation of the resulting maps over two in-situ networks: REMEDHUS in Spain and OzNet in Australia. The proposed algorithm combines SMOS brightness temperatures (at ~40 km spatial resolution), and MODIS-derived Land Surface Temperature and Normalized Differenced Vegetation Index (at 1 km), into 1km soil moisture maps. This paper also presents a variant of the algorithm, which allows for cloud-free retrievals. A statistical comparison has been carried out when the MODIS Land Surface Temperature is replaced in the algorithm by the one provided by the ERA5 reanalysis. Fine-scale estimates show good agreement in terms of correlation and root-mean-squared error with in-situ soil moisture.Peer Reviewe