Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 Imagery

<b>A</b><b>bstract: </b>Plastic litter floating in the ocean is a significant problem on a global scale. This study examines whether Sentinel-2 satellite images can be used to identify plastic litter on the sea surface for monitoring, collection and disposal. A pilot study wa...

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Main Authors: Kyriacos Themistocleous, Christiana Papoutsa, Silas Michaelides, Diofantos Hadjimitsis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-08-01
Series:Remote Sensing
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/16/2648
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spelling doaj-79bb3ec95b0b47e1a3f176cca585dab12020-11-25T03:30:56ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922020-08-01122648264810.3390/rs12162648Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 ImageryKyriacos Themistocleous0Christiana Papoutsa1Silas Michaelides2Diofantos Hadjimitsis3ERATOSTHENES Centre of Excellence, 3117 Limassol, CyprusERATOSTHENES Centre of Excellence, 3117 Limassol, CyprusERATOSTHENES Centre of Excellence, 3117 Limassol, CyprusERATOSTHENES Centre of Excellence, 3117 Limassol, Cyprus<b>A</b><b>bstract: </b>Plastic litter floating in the ocean is a significant problem on a global scale. This study examines whether Sentinel-2 satellite images can be used to identify plastic litter on the sea surface for monitoring, collection and disposal. A pilot study was conducted to determine if plastic targets on the sea surface can be detected using remote sensing techniques with Sentinel-2 data. A target made up of plastic water bottles with a surface measuring 3 m × 10 m was created, which was subsequently placed in the sea near the Old Port in Limassol, Cyprus. An unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was used to acquire multispectral aerial images of the area of interest during the same time as the Sentinel-2 satellite overpass. Spectral signatures of the water and the plastic litter after it was placed in the water were taken with an SVC HR1024 spectroradiometer. The study found that the plastic litter target was easiest to detect in the NIR wavelengths. Seven established indices for satellite image processing were examined to determine whether they can identify plastic litter in the water. Further, the authors examined two new indices, the Plastics Index (PI) and the Reversed Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (RNDVI) to be used in the processing of the satellite image. The newly developed Plastic Index (PI) was able to identify plastic objects floating on the water surface and was the most effective index in identifying the plastic litter target in the sea.https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/16/2648Sentinel-2satellite imagesplastic litterspectral indicesspectroscopyremote sensing
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kyriacos Themistocleous
Christiana Papoutsa
Silas Michaelides
Diofantos Hadjimitsis
spellingShingle Kyriacos Themistocleous
Christiana Papoutsa
Silas Michaelides
Diofantos Hadjimitsis
Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 Imagery
Remote Sensing
Sentinel-2
satellite images
plastic litter
spectral indices
spectroscopy
remote sensing
author_facet Kyriacos Themistocleous
Christiana Papoutsa
Silas Michaelides
Diofantos Hadjimitsis
author_sort Kyriacos Themistocleous
title Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 Imagery
title_short Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 Imagery
title_full Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 Imagery
title_fullStr Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 Imagery
title_full_unstemmed Investigating Detection of Floating Plastic Litter from Space Using Sentinel-2 Imagery
title_sort investigating detection of floating plastic litter from space using sentinel-2 imagery
publisher MDPI AG
series Remote Sensing
issn 2072-4292
publishDate 2020-08-01
description <b>A</b><b>bstract: </b>Plastic litter floating in the ocean is a significant problem on a global scale. This study examines whether Sentinel-2 satellite images can be used to identify plastic litter on the sea surface for monitoring, collection and disposal. A pilot study was conducted to determine if plastic targets on the sea surface can be detected using remote sensing techniques with Sentinel-2 data. A target made up of plastic water bottles with a surface measuring 3 m × 10 m was created, which was subsequently placed in the sea near the Old Port in Limassol, Cyprus. An unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) was used to acquire multispectral aerial images of the area of interest during the same time as the Sentinel-2 satellite overpass. Spectral signatures of the water and the plastic litter after it was placed in the water were taken with an SVC HR1024 spectroradiometer. The study found that the plastic litter target was easiest to detect in the NIR wavelengths. Seven established indices for satellite image processing were examined to determine whether they can identify plastic litter in the water. Further, the authors examined two new indices, the Plastics Index (PI) and the Reversed Normalized Difference Vegetation Index (RNDVI) to be used in the processing of the satellite image. The newly developed Plastic Index (PI) was able to identify plastic objects floating on the water surface and was the most effective index in identifying the plastic litter target in the sea.
topic Sentinel-2
satellite images
plastic litter
spectral indices
spectroscopy
remote sensing
url https://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/12/16/2648
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AT christianapapoutsa investigatingdetectionoffloatingplasticlitterfromspaceusingsentinel2imagery
AT silasmichaelides investigatingdetectionoffloatingplasticlitterfromspaceusingsentinel2imagery
AT diofantoshadjimitsis investigatingdetectionoffloatingplasticlitterfromspaceusingsentinel2imagery
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