Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates

Shallow water bathymetry is important for both safe navigation and natural resource management purposes. Extracting depth information from spectral imagery allows identification of benthic features and characterization of coral reef habitats, especially in remote islands. Techniques have been develo...

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Main Author: Camacho, Mark A.
Other Authors: Siciliano, Daria
Format: Others
Published: Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2674
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spelling ndltd-nps.edu-oai-calhoun.nps.edu-10945-26742017-05-24T16:07:54Z Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates Camacho, Mark A. Siciliano, Daria Olsen, Richard C. Naval Postgraduate School (U.S.). Artificial satellites Remote sensing Satellites Natural resources Maps Shallow water bathymetry is important for both safe navigation and natural resource management purposes. Extracting depth information from spectral imagery allows identification of benthic features and characterization of coral reef habitats, especially in remote islands. Techniques have been developed to extract water depth from multispectral imagery (Lyzenga, 1978; Philpot, 1989). These techniques can be difficult to apply in optically shallow waters with heterogeneous bottom types and varying albedo, and require tuning of multiple parameters. An improved algorithm to extract water depth from multispectral satellite imagery was proposed by Stumpf et al. (2003) to generate bathymetric maps with limited a priori information. The algorithm is based on the ratios of transformed reflectance values in the visible bands, retrieving greater depths than previous algorithms and compensating for variable bottom type and albedo. This method requires fewer tunable parameters and can be applied to low-albedo features. Although Stumpf et al. (2003) conclude that the method is robust and works well over variable bottom types, recent studies have pointed out limitations, mostly attributable to varying albedo (Clark, 2005; Densham, 2005). This research attempts to quantify the contribution of variable benthic substrates to the algorithmâ s accuracy by classifying the scene into its main bottom types and tuning the coefficients separately. The algorithm is evaluated using a QuickBird high resolution multispectral image of the remote Midway Atoll, in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Classifying the image into two main bottom types and tuning the coefficients separately produced a small improvement in the accuracy of the bathymetric estimates when bottom reflectance is included as a factor. This result indicates that Stumpf et al. (2003)â s ratio method is not insensitive to variable bottom type, and that knowledge of the distribution and extent of different benthic substrates in optically shallow waters has the potential to improve bathymetric derivation in remote coastal areas such as coral reef environments in the Pacific. 2012-03-14T17:35:55Z 2012-03-14T17:35:55Z 2006-09 Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2674 72705270 Approved for public release, distribution unlimited xiv, 75 p. : col. ill. ; application/pdf Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Artificial satellites
Remote sensing
Satellites
Natural resources
Maps
spellingShingle Artificial satellites
Remote sensing
Satellites
Natural resources
Maps
Camacho, Mark A.
Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates
description Shallow water bathymetry is important for both safe navigation and natural resource management purposes. Extracting depth information from spectral imagery allows identification of benthic features and characterization of coral reef habitats, especially in remote islands. Techniques have been developed to extract water depth from multispectral imagery (Lyzenga, 1978; Philpot, 1989). These techniques can be difficult to apply in optically shallow waters with heterogeneous bottom types and varying albedo, and require tuning of multiple parameters. An improved algorithm to extract water depth from multispectral satellite imagery was proposed by Stumpf et al. (2003) to generate bathymetric maps with limited a priori information. The algorithm is based on the ratios of transformed reflectance values in the visible bands, retrieving greater depths than previous algorithms and compensating for variable bottom type and albedo. This method requires fewer tunable parameters and can be applied to low-albedo features. Although Stumpf et al. (2003) conclude that the method is robust and works well over variable bottom types, recent studies have pointed out limitations, mostly attributable to varying albedo (Clark, 2005; Densham, 2005). This research attempts to quantify the contribution of variable benthic substrates to the algorithmâ s accuracy by classifying the scene into its main bottom types and tuning the coefficients separately. The algorithm is evaluated using a QuickBird high resolution multispectral image of the remote Midway Atoll, in the Northwestern Hawaiian Islands. Classifying the image into two main bottom types and tuning the coefficients separately produced a small improvement in the accuracy of the bathymetric estimates when bottom reflectance is included as a factor. This result indicates that Stumpf et al. (2003)â s ratio method is not insensitive to variable bottom type, and that knowledge of the distribution and extent of different benthic substrates in optically shallow waters has the potential to improve bathymetric derivation in remote coastal areas such as coral reef environments in the Pacific.
author2 Siciliano, Daria
author_facet Siciliano, Daria
Camacho, Mark A.
author Camacho, Mark A.
author_sort Camacho, Mark A.
title Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates
title_short Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates
title_full Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates
title_fullStr Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates
title_full_unstemmed Depth analysis of Midway Atoll using Quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates
title_sort depth analysis of midway atoll using quickbird multi-spectral imaging over variable substrates
publisher Monterey California. Naval Postgraduate School
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/10945/2674
work_keys_str_mv AT camachomarka depthanalysisofmidwayatollusingquickbirdmultispectralimagingovervariablesubstrates
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