An Airborne Remote Sensing Experiment for Catchment-Scale Water Cycle Study in a Typical Inland River Basin of China

A simultaneous airborne, satellite and ground based remote sensing experiment which is aiming to improve the observability, understanding, and predictability of hydrological and related ecological processes at catchmental scale is implemented in a typical inland river basin of northwest China. The experiment is composed of the cold region, forest, and arid region hydrological experiments as well as a hydro/meteorological elements and Doppler radar precipitation observation experiment. Airborne microwave radiometers at L, K and Ka bands, hyperspectral imager, thermal imager, and lidar are used. Various satellite data are collected. Based on these observations, the remote sensing retrieval models and algorithms of water cycle variables can be developed or improved, and a catchment-scale land/hydrological data assimilation system is going to be developed.