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Spatial and temporal variation of 10-cm background soil moisture
Proc. SPIE 6217, 62171T (2006); http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.666221
Monday 17 April 2006
Orlando (Kissimmee), FL, USA
Detection and Remediation Technologies for Mines and Minelike Targets XI
J. Thomas Broach, Russell S. Harmon, John H. Holloway, Jr.
Soil moisture affects soil thermal and dielectric properties and may cause false alarms in detecting manmade objects when dielectric or thermal discontinuities exist in the soil. The spatial variability of soil moisture changes with time and it is important to understand this behavior because it is relevant for detection of small targets, and for modeling background moisture and temperature. Surface moisture of the top 6 cm of soil was sampled on regular grids with an impedance probe at a 0.1-m interval during wetting and drying events, both four days in duration. Maximum variances for data collected in August 2004 increased with decreasing mean moisture, as soil dried following a soaking rainfall. Maximum variances in June 2005 decreased over several days of intermittent rain as the soil rewetted following a prolonged drought. Spatially dependent ranges of approximately 0.5-m lag distance and exponential model fits were consistent among all the data sets, despite changes in moisture, moisture trend, and sample variance. The procession of spatial variation is described by variograms that transition from high to low maximum variances (sills) for wetting events, and from low to high maximum variances for drying events. A linear relationship between the maximum variance and mean of square root of ϵ was consistent for both years, except when the soil was incompletely wetted after a drought. The highest spatial variance in moisture that produced the most variable background for small target detection occurred as a consequence of the incomplete or uneven wetting following a drought.
© 2006 COPYRIGHT SPIE--The International Society for Optical Engineering. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
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Online May 18, 2006
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Rae Melloh, George Mason, Chris Berini and Ronald Bailey, "Spatial and temporal variation of 10-cm background soil moisture",
Proc. SPIE 6217, 62171T (2006); http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.666221
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