4.7 Article

Combining Optical and Radar Satellite Imagery to Investigate the Surface Properties and Evolution of the Lordsburg Playa, New Mexico, USA

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 13, Issue 17, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs13173402

Keywords

spectral unmxing; optical imagery; SAR imagery; Google Earth Engine; hydrology; playa

Funding

  1. Advancing Research in Transportation Emissions, Energy, and Health (CARTEEH) project [UTEP-01-13]
  2. NASA [80NSSC19K0195, NNX16AH13G]
  3. NASA [903811, NNX16AH13G] Funding Source: Federal RePORTER

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This study utilizes a combination of optical and radar satellite imagery processed with Google Earth Engine to analyze the Lordsburg Playa, identifying surface properties and potential sources of sediment loading. By employing the Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) techniques, the study also detects land surface changes and sinks for sediment. The linear spectral unmixing algorithm addresses the limitations of moderate spatial resolutions in Landsat and Sentinel-2 images, and the use of GEE streamlines the acquisition, processing, and analysis of satellite data.
Driven by erodible soil, hydrological stresses, land use/land cover (LULC) changes, and meteorological parameters, windblown dust events initiated from Lordsburg Playa, New Mexico, United States, threaten public safety and health through low visibility and exposure to dust emissions. Combining optical and radar satellite imagery products can provide invaluable benefits in characterizing surface properties of desert playas-a potent landform for wind erosion. The optical images provide a long-term data record, while radar images can observe land surface irrespective of clouds, darkness, and precipitation. As a home for optical and radar imagery, powerful algorithms, cloud computing infrastructure, and application programming interface applications, Google Earth Engine (GEE) is an invaluable resource facilitating acquisition, processing, and analysis. In this study, the fractional abundance of soil, vegetation, and water endmembers were determined from pixel mixtures using the linear spectral unmixing model in GEE for Lordsburg Playa. For this approach, Landsat 5 and 8 images at 30 m spatial resolution and Sentinel-2 images at 10-20 m spatial resolution were used. Employing the Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (InSAR) techniques, the playa's land surface changes and possible sinks for sediment loading from the surrounding catchment area were identified. In this data recipe, a pair of Sentinel-1 images bracketing a monsoon day with high rainfall and a pair of images representing spring (dry, windy) and monsoon seasons were used. The combination of optical and radar images significantly improved the effort to identify long-term changes in the playa and locations within the playa susceptible to hydrological stresses and LULC changes. The linear spectral unmixing algorithm addressed the limitation of Landsat and Sentinel-2 images related to their moderate spatial resolutions. The application of GEE facilitated the study by minimizing the time required for acquisition, processing, and analysis of images, and storage required for the big satellite data.

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