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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (UAS) have show to be useful for numerous observations that can be helpful in Earth science research and related applications. The potential benefits of small instrumented platforms operated within line-of-sight include high spatial resolution, quick response, minimum environmental impact, and affordability, Results to date suggest there is a strong future for small UASs operated for research and environmental monitoring purposes. For example, there is clearly significant potential for observations suitable for agricultural research and production activities. Local scale atmospheric measurements can be helpful in our understanding of water and carbon cycle processes, as well as provide monitoring of key environmental factors such as carbon dioxide and ozone. Recent work has included an emphasis on remote sensing coastal observations, w3h an eye towards related measurements in the polar regions. Specific elements associated with successfully utilizing these small airborne systems include mission definition, sensors and data systems, platform subsystems, airspace access and training.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: AIAA Infotech@Aerospace Conference; Apr 06, 2009 - Apr 09, 2009; Seattle, WA; United States
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-07-13
    Description: Burgeoning new technology in the design and development of robotic aircraft-unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs)-presents unprecedented opportunities for the volcanology community to observe, measure, and sample eruption plumes and drifting volcanic clouds in situ. While manned aircraft can sample dilute parts of such emissions, demonstrated hazards to air breathing, and most particularly turbine, engines preclude penetration of the zones of highest ash concentrations. Such areas within plumes are often of highest interest with respect to boundary conditions of applicable mass-loading retrieval models, as well as Lagrangian, Eulerian, and hybrid transport models used by hazard responders to predict plume trajectories, particularly in the context of airborne hazards. Before the 2010 Ejyafyallajokull eruption in Iceland, ICAO zero-ash-tolerance rules were typically followed, particularly for relatively uncrowded Pacific Rim airspace, and over North and South America, where often diversion of aircraft around ash plumes and clouds was practical. The 2010 eruption in Iceland radically changed the paradigm, in that critical airspace over continental Europe and the United Kingdom were summarily shut by local civil aviation authorities and EURO CONTROL. A strong desire emerged for better real-time knowledge of ash cloud characteristics, particularly ash concentrations, and especially for validation of orbital multispectral imaging. UAV platforms appear to provide a viable adjunct, if not a primary source, of such in situ data for volcanic plumes and drifting volcanic clouds from explosive eruptions, with prompt and comprehensive application to aviation safety and to the basic science of volcanology. Current work is underway in Costa Rica at Turrialba volcano by the authors, with the goal of developing and testing new small, economical UAV platforms, with miniaturized instrument payloads, within a volcanic plume. We are underway with bi-monthly deployments of tethered SO2-sondes and are in the planning stages for the deployment of the SIERRA UAV to our site in March 2013. We will be conducting in situ observations simultaneously with ASTER orbital multispectral TIR data acquisitions, in order to compare in situ measurements with estimates of SO2 mass loading and dispersion derived from ASTER data. Though small UAVs are now being considered for use in active volcanic areas for in situ sampling of emissions (e.g., efforts by our group, and by our colleagues at the INGV in Italy and the Applied Science University in Dusseldorf, Germany, and others in the United Kingdom and Iceland), and also for remote sensing, much more needs to be done in the way of instrument development, and in developing small UAVs for both low altitude (tropospheric) and high altitude (stratospheric) applications. In particular, the development of all weather and day/night operational flight capabilities in close proximity to hazardous topography is crucial to a truly responsive volcano in situ measurement system. Finally, it is imperative that national civil aviation authorities recognize the unique benefits of such platforms. It is important that authorities understand that severely restricting or not deploying such tools in airspace over restless volcanoes or within eruption plumes, ostensibly because of the perceived (small) risk that such unmanned aircraft pose to manned air operations, itself poses a bigger transcendental risk to proximal populations and particularly to the aviation community, itself.
    Keywords: Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
    Type: 2011 William Smith Meeting; Oct 04, 2011 - Oct 05, 2011; London; United Kingdom
    Format: text
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