Freeze/thaw classification for prairie soils using SSM/I radiobrightnesses

Data from the Nimbus-7 Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR) have been used to classify snow-free soils in the northern Great Plains as either frozen or thawed. The technique is based on differing sensitivities among SMMR radiobrightness frequencies to liquid moisture and volume scattering in the upper few millimeters of bare soil. The SMMR is no longer active. A current near-equivalent is the Special Sensor Microwave/Imager (SSM/I). The authors demonstrate that SSM/I radiobrightnesses also exhibit differential sensitivities to liquid water and volume scattering in frozen soil despite their higher frequencies. They find that the best classification discriminants for SSM/I data are a combination of the 37-GHz V-pol radiobrightnesses and the 19-to-37-GHz V-pol spectral gradients. They also examine the sensitivity of the classification to atmospheric emission and absorption and find little effect.