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Remote Sensing of Flow Velocity, Channel Bathymetry, and River Discharge



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Autore: Legleiter Carl Visualizza persona
Titolo: Remote Sensing of Flow Velocity, Channel Bathymetry, and River Discharge Visualizza cluster
Pubblicazione: Basel, Switzerland, : MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2020
Descrizione fisica: 1 electronic resource (286 p.)
Soggetto topico: Research & information: general
Soggetto non controllato: estuary
morphology
rapid assessment
bathymetry
flow velocity
salinity
tool
remotely-sensed imagery
small unmanned aerial system (sUAS)
river flow
thermal infrared imagery
particle image velocimetry
lidar bathymetry
fluvial
geomorphology
change detection
remotely piloted aircraft system
refraction correction
structure-from-motion photogrammetry
water surface elevation
topographic error
machine learning
UAV LiDAR
airborne laser bathymetry
full waveform processing
performance assessment
high resolution hydro-mapping
remote sensing
rivers
discharge
hydrology
modelling
ungauged basins
Alaska
river
PIV
large-scale particle image velocimetry
LSPIV
surface velocity
river discharge
Doppler radar
pulsed radar
probability concept
water temperature
salmonids
Pend Oreille River
thermal infrared (TIR)
acoustic Doppler current profiler (ADCP)
channel bathymetry
cold-water refuge
dam
flooding
high-water marks (HWMs)
small unmanned aircraft systems (sUAS)
drone
photogrammetry
hydraulic modeling
aerial photography
surveying
inundation
Landsat
streamflow
flow frequency
satellite revisit time
flow regime
Persona (resp. second.): PavelskyTamlin
DurandMichael
AllenGeorge
TarpanelliAngelica
FrassonRenato
GuneralpInci
WoodgetAmy
LegleiterCarl
Sommario/riassunto: River discharge is a fundamental hydrologic quantity that summarizes how a watershed transforms the input of precipitation into output as channelized streamflow. Accurate discharge measurements are critical for a range of applications including water supply, navigation, recreation, management of in-stream habitat, and the prediction and monitoring of floods and droughts. However, the traditional stream gage networks that provide such data are sparse and declining. Remote sensing represents an appealing alternative for obtaining streamflow information. Potential advantages include greater efficiency, expanded coverage, increased measurement frequency, lower cost and reduced risk to field personnel. In addition, remote sensing provides opportunities to examine long river segments with continuous coverage and high spatial resolution. To realize these benefits, research must focus on the remote measurement of flow velocity, channel geometry and their product: river discharge. This Special Issue fostered the development of novel methods for retrieving discharge and its components, and thus stimulated progress toward an operational capacity for streamflow monitoring. The papers herein address all aspects of the remote measurement of streamflow—estimation of flow velocity, bathymetry (water depth), and discharge—from various types of remotely sensed data acquired from a range of platforms: manned and unmanned aircraft, satellites, and ground-based non-contact sensors.
Titolo autorizzato: Remote Sensing of Flow Velocity, Channel Bathymetry, and River Discharge  Visualizza cluster
Formato: Materiale a stampa
Livello bibliografico Monografia
Lingua di pubblicazione: Inglese
Record Nr.: 9910557114203321
Lo trovi qui: Univ. Federico II
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