Soil freeze/thaw cycles over snow‐free land detected by passive microwave remote sensing

The timing, duration, and areal extent of the near‐surface soil freeze/thaw status were investigated using passive microwave satellite remote sensing data for the 1997/98 winter over the contiguous United States. A frozen soil algorithm was validated using soil temperature data at 0 cm and 5 cm depths from more than 20 sites over the study area. Results indicated that a negative spectral gradient and a cut‐off 37‐GHz vertical polarized brightness temperature of 258.2K can be used to determine near‐surface soil freeze/thaw status with confidence. The microwave freeze/thaw boundary generally agreed with −5.0°C isotherm of air temperature although frozen soils occurred sporadically between 0°C and −5.0°C isotherms. The maximum frozen soil area over snow‐free land surface was about 3.75 × 106 km² or about 37% of the total study area during the 1997/98 winter. The near‐surface soils often froze before snow covered the land surface, but soil freeze/thaw status under snow cover cannot be detected using this microwave technique. The onset of soil freeze mainly occurred in October and November, while the last days of soil freeze occurred in March and April, resulting in the duration of soil freezing varying from five to seven months over the majority of the study areas. The number of days of surface soil freezing varied from several days to longer than five months.