knitr::opts_chunk$set( collapse = TRUE, comment = "#>", fig.path = "man/figures/" )
An R package for acquisition and processing of NASA (Soil Moisture Active-Passive) SMAP data
To install smapr from CRAN:
install.packages("smapr")
To install the development version from GitHub:
# install.packages("devtools") devtools::install_github("ropensci/smapr")
If a local installation is not possible for some reason, we have made a Docker image available with smapr and all its dependencies.
docker run -d -p 8787:8787 earthlab/smapr
In a web browser, navigate to localhost:8787 and log in with username: rstudio, password: rstudio.
Access to the NASA SMAP data requires authentication through NASA's Earthdata portal. If you do not already have a username and password through Earthdata, you can register for an account here: https://urs.earthdata.nasa.gov/ You cannot use this package without an Earthdata account.
Once you have an account, you need to pass your Earthdata username (ed_un
)
and password (ed_pw
) as environmental variables that can be read from within
your R session.
There are a couple of ways to do this:
Use set_smap_credentials('yourusername', 'yourpasswd')
.
This will save your credentials by default, overwriting existing credentials if
overwrite = TRUE
.
Sys.setenv()
interactively in your R session to set your username and
password (not including the <
and >
):Sys.setenv(ed_un = "<your username>", ed_pw = "<your password>")
.Renviron
in your home directory, which contains your
username and password.
If you don't know what your home directory is, execute normalizePath("~/")
in
the R console and it will be printed.
Be sure to include a new line at the end of the file or R will fail silently
when loading it.Example .Renviron file
(note the new line at the end!):
ed_un=slkdjfsldkjfs ed_pw=dlfkjDD124^
Once this file is created, restart your R session and you should now be able to
access these environment variables (e.g., via Sys.getenv("ed_un")
).
Multiple SMAP data products are provided by the NSIDC, and these products vary in the amount of processing. Currently, smapr primarily supports level 3 and level 4 data products, which represent global daily composite and global three hourly modeled data products, respectively. There are a wide variety of data layers available in SMAP products, including surface soil moisture, root zone soil moisture, freeze/thaw status, surface temperature, vegetation water content, vegetation opacity, net ecosystem carbon exchange, soil temperature, and evapotranspiration. NSIDC provides documentation for all SMAP data products on their website, and we provide a summary of data products supported by smapr below.
| Dataset id | Description | Resolution | |------------|-----------------------------------------------------|------------| | SPL2SMAP_S | SMAP/Sentinel-1 Radiometer/Radar Soil Moisture | 3 km | | SPL3FTA | Radar Northern Hemisphere Daily Freeze/Thaw State | 3 km | | SPL3SMA | Radar Global Daily Soil Moisture | 3 km | | SPL3SMP | Radiometer Global Soil Moisture | 36 km | | SPL3SMAP | Radar/Radiometer Global Soil Moisture | 9 km | | SPL4SMAU | Surface/Rootzone Soil Moisture Analysis Update | 9 km | | SPL4SMGP | Surface/Rootzone Soil Moisture Geophysical Data | 9 km | | SPL4SMLM | Surface/Rootzone Soil Moisture Land Model Constants | 9 km | | SPL4CMDL | Carbon Net Ecosystem Exchange | 9 km |
At a high level, most workflows follow these steps:
find_smap()
download_smap()
list_smap()
extract_smap()
Each of these steps are outlined below:
Data are hosted on a server by the National Snow and Ice Data Center.
The find_smap()
function searches for specific data products and returns a
data frame of available data.
As data mature and pass checks, versions advance.
At any specific time, not all versions of all datasets for all dates may exist.
For the most up to date overview of dataset versions, see the NSIDC SMAP data
version webpage.
library(smapr) library(terra) available_data <- find_smap(id = "SPL3SMAP", date = "2015-05-25", version = 3) str(available_data)
Given a data frame produced by find_smap
, download_smap
downloads the data
onto the local file system.
Unless a directory is specified as an argument, the data are stored in the
user's cache.
downloads <- download_smap(available_data) str(downloads)
The SMAP data are provided in HDF5 format, and in any one file there are
actually multiple data sets, including metadata.
The list_smap
function allows users to inspect the contents of downloaded
data at a high level (all = FALSE
) or in depth (all = TRUE
).
list_smap(downloads, all = FALSE)
To see all of the data fields, set all = TRUE
.
The extract_smap
function extracts gridded data products
(e.g., global soil moisture).
If more than one file has been downloaded and passed into the first argument, extract_smap
extracts data for each file
sm_raster <- extract_smap(downloads, "Soil_Moisture_Retrieval_Data/soil_moisture") plot(sm_raster, main = "Level 3 soil moisture: May 25, 2015")
The path "Soil_Moisture_Retrieval_Data/soil_moisture" was determined from the
output of list_smap(downloads, all = TRUE)
, which lists all of the data
contained in SMAP data files.
The data can be saved as a GeoTIFF using the writeRaster
function
from the terra pacakge.
writeRaster(sm_raster, "sm_raster.tif")
# cleanup file.remove("sm_raster.tif")
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