NASA-USDA-FAS Soil Moisture / IMERG

  • Released Wednesday, March 30, 2016
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This visualization shows the correlation and lag time of surface soil moisture following precipitation events over Australia, India, and the United States. It uses the new NASA-USDA-FAS Soil Moisture product, a joint effort of NASA and the USDA Foreign Agricultural Service, and the global Integrated Multi-satellitE Retrievals for GPM (IMERG) precipitation dataset, which provides rainfall rates for the entire world every thirty minutes. This animation shows the 30-minute rainfall product, while the soil moisture data is a three-day moving average. Anomaly data is expressed as a standardized anomaly, e.g. (value-average)/stdev, and as such is unitless.

For more detailed information about the soil moisture product:
http://www.pecad.fas.usda.gov/cropexplorer/description.aspx?legendid=355

Bolten, J. D., W. T. Crow, T. J. Jackson, X. Zhan, and C. A. Reynolds (2010), Evaluating the utility of remotely-sensed soil moisture retrievals for operational agricultural drought monitoring, IEEE J. Sel. Topics Appl. Earth Obs., 3(1), 57–66.

Soil Moisture / Precipitation in Australia, Anomaly, Hyperwall Resolution

Soil Moisture / Precipitation in Australia, Anomaly, Hyperwall Resolution

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Credits

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NASA's Scientific Visualization Studio

Release date

This page was originally published on Wednesday, March 30, 2016.
This page was last updated on Wednesday, October 9, 2024 at 12:06 AM EDT.


Datasets used

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