Title :
Precise upwelling and filaments automatic extraction from multisensorial imagery
Author :
Marcello, Javier ; Eugenio, Francisco ; Marqués, Ferran
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Signal & Commun., Univ. of Las Palmas, Spain
Abstract :
The upward movement of cool and nutrient-rich waters towards the surface leads to horizontal alterations in the distribution of physical, chemical and biological properties. Remote sensing is being extensively applied to detect such coastal upwellings; however, the enormous amount of data daily generated obliges to develop automatic detection and prediction tools. The problem of identifying oceanographic mesoscale structures has been studied using a variety of image processing techniques, however, the outstanding difficulties encountered in the traditional approaches are the presence of noise, mainly due to the clouds and other atmospheric phenomena; the fact that gradients are weak and provide excess of information; the strong morphological variation that impedes an accurate geometric representation and the absence of a valid analytical model for the structures. In this context, the proposed automatic upwelling extraction methodology overcomes the preceding detection inconveniences and achieves a highly accurate structure detection and identification. This automatic technique has been applied to the detection and feature extraction of coastal upwellings and filaments in the northwest African coast, the Alboran Sea and Cape Ghir using imagery from the AVHRR/2&3, SeaWiFS and MODIS sensors. The system has proven to be very effective and robust in a wide variety of climate conditions.
Keywords :
atmospheric techniques; climatology; clouds; feature extraction; geophysical signal processing; image morphing; image segmentation; image sensors; ocean temperature; oceanographic regions; oceanographic techniques; remote sensing; sensor fusion; water; AVHRR imagery; Alboran Sea; Cape Ghir; MODIS sensors; SeaWiFS sensors; atmospheric phenomena; automatic detection; automatic upwelling extraction methodology; climate condition; clouds; coastal upwellings; feature extraction; filaments automatic extraction; geometric representation; image processing technique; multisensorial imagery; northwest African coast; nutrient-rich waters; oceanographic mesoscale structures; remote sensing; strong morphological variation; structure detection; structure identification; Chemicals; Clouds; Data mining; Image processing; Impedance; Remote sensing; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Surface morphology; Water;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2004. IGARSS '04. Proceedings. 2004 IEEE International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-8742-2
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2004.1370745