1. Ice Detection for Satellite Ocean Color Data Processing in the Great Lakes.
- Author
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Seunghyun Son and Menghua Wang
- Subjects
REMOTE sensing ,WATER quality ,ICE ,OCEAN color measurement ,PIXELS ,ALGORITHMS - Abstract
Satellite remote-sensing data are essential for monitoring and quantifying water properties in the Great Lakes, providing useful monitoring and management tools for understanding water optical, biological, and ecological processes and phenomena. However, during the winter season, large parts of the Great Lakes are often covered by ice, which can cause significant uncertainties in satellite-measured water quality products. Although some developed radiance-based ice-detection algorithms for satellite ocean color data processing can eliminate most of the ice pixels in a region, there are still some significant errors due to misidentification of ice-contaminated pixels, particularly for the thin ice-covered regions. Therefore, it is necessary to improve the ice-detection methods for satellite ocean color data processing in the Great Lakes. In this paper, impacts of ice contamination on satellite-derived ocean color products in the Great Lakes are investigated, and a refined regional ice-detection algorithm which is based on the radiance spectra and normalized water-leaving radiance at the wavelength of 551 nm, nLw(551), is developed and assessed for satellite ocean color data processing in the Great Lakes. Results show that this proposed ice-detection method can reasonably identify ice-contaminated pixels, including those in very thin ice-covered regions, and provide accurate satellite ocean color products for the winter season in the Great Lakes. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2017
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