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Introduction
There are several methods for determining soil moisture content. Conventional Time Domain
Reflectometry (Topp et al., 1980) and drying methods are commonly used to estimate water
content in homogeneous soils at shallow depths (Yoshikawa et al., 2004; Boike and Roth, 1997). Moreover,
accurate measurement of the total water content can be accomplished by thermalization of
neutrons and by gamma ray attenuation, but transportation of radioactive equipment into
Arctic regions is impracticable (Boike and Roth, 1997). A review of state-of-the-art methods for
measuring soil water content can be found in (Topp and Ferre, 2002; Gardner, 1986). However, the
above-mentioned well-established methods rely on installation of special equipment in the
field, or on laboratory experiments, and hence are not applicable for recovering soil
water content from various soil temperature records.
Thermal properties can be also measured in the laboratory or in-situ experiments
including the Needle Probe (Herzen and Maxwell, 1959), Divided Bar (Birch, 1950), borehole
relaxation (Wilhelm, 1990), non-linear fitting (Da-Xin, 1986), thermal pulse
(Silliman and Neuzil, 1990), and estimation from thermal gradients (Somerton, 1992) methods.
Reviews of some of these methods can be found in (Beck, 1988). Similar to methods
measuring water content, the methods for determining thermal properties are not
applicable for recovering thermal properties from typical temperature measurements, i.e.
temperature records at different depths. Methods that estimate thermal properties from
temperature records include the Simple Fourier Methods (Carson, 1963), Perturbed
Fourier Method (Hurley and Wiltshire, 1993), and Graphical Finite Difference Method
(Zhang and Osterkamp, 1995; McGaw et al., 1978; Hinkel, 1997). They estimate coefficients in the heat equation and
yield accurate results for the thermal diffusivity (ratio of the thermal conductivity to
the heat capacity) only when the phase change of water does not occur.
One alternative capable of estimating both thermal properties and water content of soil
is variational assimilation of temperature observations into a model of soil freezing and
thawing. A goal of the variational assimilation is to adjust/optimize a set of model parameters in order to minimize a difference
between the observed and modeled temperatures. The set includes
parameters related to thermal conductivity, soil porosity and coefficients determining
unfrozen water content for partially frozen soil. Beck (1964) and Nagler (1965) have applied the least square variational approach to estimate thermal properties in a
heat conduction problem without phase change. In this article, we compute soil
temperature, , by employing the 1-D heat equation with phase change of water
(Carslaw and Jaeger, 1959) and minimize the discrepancy
by optimizing .
Results from (Alifanov, 1994; Alifanov et al., 1996; Beck et al., 1985) include a detailed mathematical and
theoretical analysis of variational temperature assimilation for the heat equation
without explicit phase change terms. Some analysis of parameter estimation in heat
conduction problems with phase change can be found in
(Ouyang, 1992; Permyakov, 2004; Pavlov et al., 1980). However, it is hard to find discussion of
variational assimilation being used to recover soil properties from in-situ temperature
measurements in the active layer and permafrost.
We apply a variational technique to estimate thermal conductivity,
porosity, and coefficients describing unfrozen water content at four locations along the
Dalton Highway in Alaska. To evaluate the thermal properties, we use daily temperature
measurements and a once-a-year temperature profile in 60 meter boreholes. Also, we
conduct several numerical experiments and explore robustness of recovering the thermal
properties. The recovered properties that are associated with the minimum of
are sought by an iterative method. Since there could be several local
minima, a thoughtful selection of an initial approximation of as well as a
certain regularization is necessary (Nicolsky et al., 2007). We add to
a
regularization that incorporates a priori estimate of values in the optimal
control vector. Besides the regularization, we assume that the soil properties are
constants within each soil horizon. This assumption decreases a hundred fold the number
of variables in the control vector on which the cost function depends, and hence
simplifies the problem.
Next: Model of soil freezing Up: Estimation of soil thermal Previous: Estimation of soil thermal

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