4.7 Article

Near-real-time non-obstructed flood inundation mapping using synthetic aperture radar

Journal

REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT
Volume 221, Issue -, Pages 302-315

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2018.11.008

Keywords

Flood inundation mapping; Synthetic aperture radar; Sentinel; Nepartak; Harvey; Near real-time

Funding

  1. Real-Time and Early Warning System of Substations Vulnerability during Storm-Flood Events - Eversource Energy Center at the University of Connecticut
  2. Planning for Climate Resilient and Fish-Friendly Road/Stream Crossings in Connecticut's Northwest Hills - Housatonic Valley Association (HVA)
  3. Municipal Resilience Planning Assistance Project - Connecticut Department of Housing & Urban Development (HUD)
  4. Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [41471430]
  5. NASA [80NSSC18K0426]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In the event of a flood disaster, first response agencies need inundation maps produced in near real time (NRT). Such maps can be generated using satellite-based information. In this study, we developed mapping techniques that rely on synthetic aperture radar (SAR) on-board earth-orbiting platforms. SAR provides valid ground surface measurements through cloud cover with high resolution and sampling frequency that has recently increased through multiple missions. Despite numerous efforts, automatic processing of SAR data to derive accurate inundation maps still poses challenges. To address them, we have developed an NRT system named RAdarProduced Inundation Diary (RAPID). RAPID integrates four processing steps: classification based on statistics, morphological processing, multi-threshold-based compensation, and machine-leaming correction. Besides SAR data, the system integrates multisource remote-sensing data products, including land cover classification, water occurrence, hydrographical, water type, and river width products. In comparison to expert handmade flood maps, the fully-automated RAPID system exhibited overall, producer, and user accuracies of 93%, 77%, and 75%, respectively. RAPID accommodates commonly encountered over- and under-detections caused by noise-like speckle, water-like radar response areas, strong scatterers, and isolated inundation areas errors that are in common practice to ignore, mask out, or be filtered out by coarsening the effective resolution. RAPID can serve as the kernel algorithm to derive flood inundation products from satellites both existing and to be launched equipped with high-resolution SAR sensors, including Envisat, Radarsat, NISAR, Advanced Land Observation Satellite (ALOS)-1/2, Sentinel-1, and TerraSAR-X.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available