Microwave Emission from Row Crops

In order to examine the emission properties of vegetation without taking into consideration the effects of variations in the soil background, strips of metal screening were used to cover the soil surface between adjacent rows of plants. Temporal measurements were made at 2.7 and 5.1 GHz for soybean, wheat, and corn canopies. Several special experiments were conducted to evaluate the sensitivity of brightness temperature to look direction (relative to row direction), polarization configuration, and incidence angle, and to evaluate the emission contributions of defoliated stalks. In general, the results show that the canopy is highly anisotropic, the emission exhibits a strong dependence on polarization and look direction, and the scattering albedo is typically less than 0.1. Canopy transmissivity was estimated from the radiometric observations and then related empirically to the canopy's integrated water content. Using this relation in a zero-order radiative transfer model led to good agreement between the experimental observations and the model predictions.

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[2]  Fawwaz T. Ulaby,et al.  Active Reflector for Radar Calibration , 1984, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing.

[3]  Fawwaz T. Ulaby,et al.  Measured microwave emission and scattering in vegetation canopies , 1984, IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing.