Literature DB >> 36081454

Emulation as an Accurate Alternative to Interpolation in Sampling Radiative Transfer Codes.

Jorge Vicent1, Jochem Verrelst1, Juan Pablo Rivera-Caicedo2, Neus Sabater1, Jordi Muñoz-Marí1, Gustau Camps-Valls1, José Moreno1.   

Abstract

Computationally expensive radiative transfer models (RTMs) are widely used to realistically reproduce the light interaction with the earth surface and atmosphere. Because these models take long processing time, the common practice is to first generate a sparse look-up table (LUT) and then make use of interpolation methods to sample the multidimensional LUT input variable space. However, the question arise whether common interpolation methodsperform most accurate. As an alternative to interpolation, this paper proposes to use emulation, i.e., approximating the RTM output by means of the statistical learning. Two experiments were conducted to assess the accuracy in delivering spectral outputs using interpolation and emulation: at canopy level, using PROSAIL; and at top-of-atmosphere level, using MODTRAN. Various interpolation (nearest-neighbor, inverse distance weighting, and piece-wice linear) and emulation [Gaussian process regression (GPR), kernel ridge regression, and neural networks] methods were evaluated against a dense reference LUT. In all experiments, the emulation methods clearly produced more accurate output spectra than classical interpolation methods. The GPR emulation performed up to ten times more accurately than the best performing interpolation method, and this with a speed that is competitive with the faster interpolation methods. It is concluded that emulation can function as a fast and more accurate alternative to commonly used interpolation methods for reconstructing RTM spectral data.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Emulation; interpolation; look-up tables (LUT); machine learning; peformance simulators; processing speed; radiative transfer models (RTMs)

Year:  2018        PMID: 36081454      PMCID: PMC7613334          DOI: 10.1109/jstars.2018.2875330

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  IEEE J Sel Top Appl Earth Obs Remote Sens        ISSN: 1939-1404            Impact factor:   4.715


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