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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-19
    Description: Identifying ocean-dumped materials by analysing the upwelled solar energy from the plume is complicated by the dispersion of the plume and the spectral absorption of the water. It is shown that the spectral analysis of ocean-dump plumes, using Landsat multispectral scanner (MSS) data, should be confined to the brightest area within the plume, the region where the waste material is least dispersed and nearest the surface. The decay of the upwelled radiance with time of the brightest pixel within the plume, at least for iron acid waste, is predictable. An accurate age determination of an acid plume is limited by striping within the MSS data.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
    Type: International Journal of Remote Sensing (ISSN 0143-1161); 6; 759-771
    Format: text
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2016-06-07
    Description: A test bed aircraft multispectral scanner (TBAMS) was flown during the James Shelf, Plume Scan, and Chesapeake Bay missions as part of the Superflux 2 experiment. Excellent correlations were obtained between water sample measurements of chlorophyll and sediment and TBAMS radiance data. The three-band algorithms used were insensitive to aircraft altitude and varying atmospheric conditions. This was particularly fortunate due to the hazy conditions during most of the experiments. A contour map of sediment, and also chlorophyll, was derived for the Chesapeake Bay plume along the southern Virginia-Carolina coastline. A sediment maximum occurs about 5 nautical miles off the Virginia Beach coast with a chlorophyll maximum slightly shoreward of this. During the James Shelf mission, a thermal anomaly (or front) was encountered about 50 miles from the coast. There was a minor variation in chlorophyll and sediment across the boundary. During the Chesapeake Bay mission, the Sun elevation increased from 50 degrees to over 70 degrees, interfering with the generation of data products.
    Keywords: OCEANOGRAPHY
    Type: Chesapeake Bay Plume Study; p 323-338
    Format: application/pdf
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