6533b7d3fe1ef96bd1260254

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Global Sensitivity Analysis of Leaf-Canopy-Atmosphere RTMs: Implications for Biophysical Variables Retrieval from Top-of-Atmosphere Radiance Data.

Pablo Morcillo-pallarésJose MorenoMaria LumbierresJochem VerrelstJuan Pablo Rivera-caicedoJorge Vicent

subject

010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesradiative transfer models0211 other engineering and technologiesemulation02 engineering and technologytop-of-atmosphere radiance data01 natural sciencesEmulation; Global sensitivity analysis; Machine learning; MODTRAN; PROSAIL; Radiative transfer models; Retrieval; Sentinel-2; Top-of-atmosphere radiance dataKrigingRange (statistics)Radiative transferLeaf area indexlcsh:Scienceretrieval021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensingMODTRANPROSAILMODTRANAtmospheric correctionradiative transfer models; global sensitivity analysis; emulation; machine learning; top-of-atmosphere radiance data; PROSAIL; MODTRAN; retrieval; Sentinel-2machine learningglobal sensitivity analysisLookup tableRadianceGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesEnvironmental sciencelcsh:QSentinel-2

description

Knowledge of key variables driving the top of the atmosphere (TOA) radiance over a vegetated surface is an important step to derive biophysical variables from TOA radiance data, e.g., as observed by an optical satellite. Coupled leaf-canopy-atmosphere Radiative Transfer Models (RTMs) allow linking vegetation variables directly to the at-sensor TOA radiance measured. Global Sensitivity Analysis (GSA) of RTMs enables the computation of the total contribution of each input variable to the output variance. We determined the impacts of the leaf-canopy-atmosphere variables into TOA radiance using the GSA to gain insights into retrievable variables. The leaf and canopy RTM PROSAIL was coupled with the atmospheric RTM MODTRAN5. Because of MODTRAN’s computational burden and GSA’s demand for many simulations, we first developed a surrogate statistical learning model, i.e., an emulator, that allows approximating RTM outputs through a machine learning algorithm with low computation time. A Gaussian process regression (GPR) emulator was used to reproduce lookup tables of TOA radiance as a function of 12 input variables with relative errors of 2.4%. GSA total sensitivity results quantified the driving variables of emulated TOA radiance along the 400−2500 nm spectral range at 15 cm − 1 (between 0.3−9 nm); overall, the vegetation variables play a more dominant role than atmospheric variables. This suggests the possibility to retrieve biophysical variables directly from at-sensor TOA radiance data. Particularly promising are leaf chlorophyll content, leaf water thickness and leaf area index, as these variables are the most important drivers in governing TOA radiance outside the water absorption regions. A software framework was developed to facilitate the development of retrieval models from at-sensor TOA radiance data. As a proof of concept, maps of these biophysical variables have been generated for both TOA (L1C) and bottom-of-atmosphere (L2A) Sentinel-2 data by means of a hybrid retrieval scheme, i.e., training GPR retrieval algorithms using the RTM simulations. Obtained maps from L1C vs L2A data are consistent, suggesting that vegetation properties can be directly retrieved from TOA radiance data given a cloud-free sky, thus without the need of an atmospheric correction.

10.3390/rs11161923https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/36081836