4.3 Article

A Combined Balloon Photography and Buoy-Tracking Experiment for Mapping Surface Currents in Coastal Waters

Journal

JOURNAL OF ATMOSPHERIC AND OCEANIC TECHNOLOGY
Volume 33, Issue 6, Pages 1237-1250

Publisher

AMER METEOROLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1175/JTECH-D-15-0113.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. JSPS KAKENHI [2561041]
  2. Japan Science Society

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A novel observational technique to map surface ocean currents at high spatial resolution in narrow regions is developed. Low-altitude remote sensing using a digital camera suspended from a vessel-towed balloon is used to track trajectories of floating buoys deployed on the ocean. Surface-current velocities are thereafter computed by sequentially moving buoy locations on photo images converted into ground (Cartesian) coordinates. Field experiments were conducted in July and August 2013 using a balloon towed by a research vessel on the Seto Inland Sea. The image-derived currents were compared with those derived from buoy locations recorded by GPS receivers attached to each floating buoy. It was found that surface currents computed using GPS data contain unrealistic values arising from stochastic fluctuations in those data. However, the image-derived currents reproduced well convergent flows and a cyclonic eddy that accumulated foam and marine debris, as actually observed during the surveys. This performance is attributed to the fact that the image processing acts as a filter to remove erroneous buoy locations in computing surface currents. The estimated error was 4.1 cm s(-1), sufficiently small to measure snapshots of surface coastal currents with magnitudes greater than several tens of centimeters per second.

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