3-D Bi-directional LSTM for Satellite Soil Moisture Downscaling

Journal Publication ResearchOnline@JCU
Madhukumar, Neethu;Wang, Eric;Fookes, Clinton;Xiang, Wei
Abstract

Soil moisture (SM) is a crucial parameter of hydrological processes as it affects the exchange of water and heat at the land/atmosphere interface. Regional hydrological applications (floods and modeling of small basins) and agricultural applications (irrigation and agricultural land mapping) require daily SM values having a spatial resolution of at least 1-km. This requirement is currently unmet by existing satellite missions. Notably, SM has variability over three dimensions. As such, accurate prediction of satellite SM requires multiple bidirectional spectra-spatiotemporal analyses. However, current state-of-the-art SM downscaling models cannot yet fulfill this requirement. This article proposes a new bidirectional long short-term memory (LSTM) model dubbed the 3-D bidirectional LSTM (3D-Bi-LSTM), which downscales the soil moisture active passive (SMAP) global daily 9-km SM to daily 1-km SM. In the proposed downscaling model, the region-specific soil moisture indices (SMIs) are first extracted using a covariance-adaptive convolutional neural network (CNN) to support the extraction of important distinctive information from multispectral data. Next, the CNN output is provided to the 3D-Bi-LSTM to perform the bidirectional analysis of spatial correlation within a feature and spectral correlation between features over multiple time instants. Experimental results demonstrate the proposed model outperforms the state-of-the-art networks. An ablation study, transferability assessment, and feature importance study further demonstrate the proposed 3D-Bi-LSTM’s efficiency.

Journal

IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Publication Name

N/A

Volume

60

ISBN/ISSN

1558-0644

Edition

N/A

Issue

N/A

Pages Count

18

Location

N/A

Publisher

IEEE

Publisher Url

N/A

Publisher Location

N/A

Publish Date

N/A

Url

N/A

Date

N/A

EISSN

N/A

DOI

10.1109/TGRS.2022.3227108