DocumentCode
91827
Title
A Wavelet Approach for Estimating Chlorophyll-A From Inland Waters With Reflectance Spectroscopy
Author
Ampe, Eva M. ; Hestir, Erin L. ; Bresciani, M. ; Salvadore, Elga ; Brando, Vittorio E. ; Dekker, Arnold ; Malthus, Tim J. ; Jansen, Maarten ; Triest, Ludwig ; Batelaan, Okke
Author_Institution
Dept. of Hydrol. & Hydraulic Eng., Vrije Univ. Brussel, Brussels, Belgium
Volume
11
Issue
1
fYear
2014
fDate
Jan. 2014
Firstpage
89
Lastpage
93
Abstract
This letter presents an application of continuous wavelet analysis, providing a new semi-empirical approach to estimate Chlorophyll-a (Chl-a) in optically complex inland waters. Traditionally spectral narrow band ratios have been used to quantify key diagnostic features in the remote sensing signal to estimate concentrations of optically active water quality constituents. However, they cannot cope easily with shifts in reflectance features caused by multiple interactions between variable absorption and backscattering effects that typically occur in optically complex waters. We use continuous wavelet analysis to detect Chl-a features at various wavelengths and frequency scales. Using the wavelet decomposition, we build a 2-D correlation scalogram between in situ pond reflectance spectra and in situ Chl-a concentration. By isolating the most informative wavelet regions via thresholding, we could relate all five regions to known inherent optical properties. We select the optimal feature per region and compare them to three well-known narrow band ratio models. For this experimental application, the wavelet features outperform the NIR-red models, while fluorescence line height (FLH) yield comparable results. Because wavelets analyze the signal at different scales and synthesize information across bands, we hypothesize that the wavelet features are less sensitive to confounding factors, such as instrument noise, colored dissolved organic matter, and suspended matter.
Keywords
geophysical signal processing; hydrological techniques; organic compounds; remote sensing; spectral analysis; water quality; wavelet transforms; 2D correlation scalogram; CDOM; chlorophyll-a estimation; colored dissolved organic matter; continuous wavelet analysis; fluorescence line height; in situ pond reflectance spectra; informative wavelet regions; instrument noise; optically active water quality constituents; optically complex inland waters; optically complex waters; reflectance feature shifts; reflectance spectroscopy; remote sensing signal diagnostic features; semiempirical approach; spectral narrow band ratios; suspended matter; thresholding; variable absorption effects; variable backscattering effects; wavelet approach; wavelet decomposition; Absorption; Continuous wavelet transforms; Feature extraction; Optical sensors; Remote sensing; Wavelet analysis; Chlorophyll-a (chl-a); frequency analysis; high spectral resolution remote sensing; optically complex waters; wavelets;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
1545-598X
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/LGRS.2013.2247021
Filename
6479237
Link To Document