Journal Articles

Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://idr.nitk.ac.in/handle/123456789/19884

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    Downscaled XCO2 Estimation Using Data Fusion and AI-Based Spatio-Temporal Models
    (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers Inc., 2024) Pais, S.M.; Bhattacharjee, S.; Anand Kumar, M.; Chen, J.
    One of the well-known greenhouse gases (GHGs) produced by anthropogenic human activity is carbon dioxide (CO2). Understanding the carbon cycle and how negatively it affects the ecosystem requires analysis of the rise in CO2 concentration. This work aims to map CO2 concentration for the entire surface, making it useful for regional carbon cycle analysis. Here, column-averaged CO2 dry mole fraction, called XCO2, measured by the orbiting carbon observatory-2 (OCO-2) satellite, is used. Because of spectral interference by the clouds and aerosols, there are many missing footprints in the Level-2 swath of OCO-2, making it disruptive to understand any assessment related to the carbon cycle. The objective of this work is to predict 1 km2 XCO2 using data resampling and machine learning models. This work achieves a minimum mean absolute error (MAE) and root mean square error (RMSE) of 0.3990 and 0.8090 ppm, using the monthly models. © 2004-2012 IEEE.
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    Forecasting of Fine-Grained SIF of OCO-2 Using Multi-source Data and AI-Based Techniques
    (Springer, 2025) Pais, S.M.; Bhattacharjee, S.; Anand Kumar, M.
    The emission of unused energy absorbed from the sunlight by plants and other photosynthetic organisms is known as solar-induced fluorescence (SIF). SIF is a direct proxy for the photosynthetic activity of the plants used to monitor drought, crop yield estimation, ecological processes, and carbon cycles. Comprehending the SIF dynamics beforehand helps gain an understanding of vegetation dynamics, carbon cycle, and crop phenology. This study explores the potential of using Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) SIF data for forecasting SIF at regional scales. The research utilizes machine learning models and data fusion to forecast the SIF data, by establishing relationships between observed SIF from past timestamps and the Enhanced Vegetation Index. The lasso regression achieves minimal error of RMSE 0.0355 Wm-2nm-1sr-1 and MAPE of 16.9093% for forecasting monthly SIF data. In contrast, the light gradient boosting machine model (LG) performs well for a larger non-linear dataset, i.e., seasonal models achieving a RMSE of 0.0389 Wm-2nm-1sr-1 and MAPE of 17.4895%, respectively. Karnataka and Maharastra, the two Indian states, are considered as the study areas for this work for a temporal window of 2017–2019. Fine-grained, uniformly distributed SIF forecasting provides valuable insights for understanding vegetation responses to environmental changes, optimizing agricultural practices, and developing climate change mitigation strategies. © Indian Society of Remote Sensing 2025.
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    High-Spatial-Resolution Estimation of XCO2 Using a Stacked Ensemble Model
    (Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute (MDPI), 2025) Pais, S.M.; Bhattacharjee, S.; Anand Kumar, M.; Balamurugan, V.; Chen, J.
    Highlights: What are the main findings? The study develops a customized stacked ensemble model that generalizes (Formula presented.) predictions across multiple country, such as Germany, France, and Japan. It produces gap-filled high-resolution monthly, seasonal, and yearly maps, highlighting vegetation dynamics and seasonal cycles. What is the implication of the main finding? The customized stacked ensemble model provides reliable cross-country (Formula presented.) predictions at 1 (Formula presented.) resolution, validated against TCCON and CAMS, supporting large-scale environmental monitoring. Seasonal and yearly analyses show vegetation dynamics and photosynthetic activity significantly influence (Formula presented.), enhancing the model’s adaptability for agriculture, different climate assessments, and future global mapping. One of the leading causes of climate change and global warming is the rise in carbon dioxide ((Formula presented.)) levels. For a precise assessment of (Formula presented.) ’s impact on the climate and the creation of successful mitigation methods, it is essential to comprehend its distribution by analyzing (Formula presented.) sources and sinks, which is a challenging task using sparsely available ground monitoring stations and airborne platforms. Therefore, the data retrieved by the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) satellite can be useful due to its extensive spatial and temporal coverage. Sparse and missed retrievals in the satellite make it challenging to perform a thorough analysis. This work trains machine learning models using the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) (Formula presented.) retrievals and auxiliary features to obtain a monthly, high-spatial-resolution, gap-filled (Formula presented.) concentration distribution. It uses a multi-source aggregated (MSD) dataset and the generalized stacked ensemble model to predict country-level high-resolution (1 (Formula presented.)) (Formula presented.). When evaluated with TCCON, this country-level model can achieve an RMSE of 1.42 ppm, a MAE of 0.84 ppm, and (Formula presented.) of 0.90. © 2025 by the authors.