Hey ....Here is a question ...
You might have noticed that when pits are made for wells and other purposes, the soil moisture increases with dept . what if we increase the depth further ???.....
Answer quickly ..
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want to point out that when you measure soil surface temperature with an infrared thermometer, you really get values from the surface. This is not the case with remote soil moisture measuring because there is always a depth involved.
I believe that "surface soil moisture" always means "near surface soil moisture", and perhaps that is the terminology that we should use.
Comparison of "near surface soil moisture" measured remotely and "in situ" is almost impossible because both sensors integrate differently (in depth and space) and in ways that therefore cannot be compared.
.... Hey minha ur bio is good and their u u wrote that i will follow anyone who asks... Then i am asking that follow me(^_-)
I believe that "surface soil moisture" always means "near surface soil moisture", and perhaps that is the terminology that we should use.
Comparison of "near surface soil moisture" measured remotely and "in situ" is almost impossible because both sensors integrate differently (in depth and space) and in ways that therefore cannot be compared.
.... Hey minha ur bio is good and their u u wrote that i will follow anyone who asks... Then i am asking that follow me(^_-)
Anonymous:
i commented in that question so i am getting messages
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