Hyperspectral imaging of water quality - past applications and future directions.
Abstract
Inland waters control the delivery of sediment, carbon, and nutrients from land to ocean by transforming, depositing, and transporting constituents downstream. However, the dominant in situ conditions that control these processes are poorly constrained, especially at larger spatial scales. Hyperspectral imaging, a remote sensing technique that uses reflectance in hundreds of narrow spectral bands, can be used to estimate water quality parameters like sediment and carbon concentration over larger water bodies. Here, we review methods and applications for using hyperspectral imagery to generate near-surface two-dimensional models of water quality in lakes and rivers. Further, we show applications using newly available data from the National Ecological Observation Network aerial observation platform in the Black Warrior and Tombigbee Rivers, Alabama. We demonstrate large spatial variation in chlorophyll, colored dissolved organic matter, and turbidity in each river and uneven mixing of water quality constituents for several kilometers. Finally, we demonstrate some novel techniques using hyperspectral imagery to deconvolve dissolved organic matter spectral signatures to specific organic matter components.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2017
- Bibcode:
- 2017AGUFM.B33D2105R
- Keywords:
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- 0434 Data sets;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 0466 Modeling;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 0498 General or miscellaneous;
- BIOGEOSCIENCES;
- 1895 Instruments and techniques: monitoring;
- HYDROLOGY