3.8 Article

Perspectives on water flow and the interpretation of FLIR images

Journal

JOURNAL OF RANGE MANAGEMENT
Volume 55, Issue 2, Pages 106-111

Publisher

SOC RANGE MANAGEMENT
DOI: 10.2307/4003344

Keywords

water flow; stream temperature; FLIR imaging

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Airborne infrared thermal radiography has been proposed as a tool which may be used to monitor the water temperature along the network of streams and rivers which compose a watershed. The proponents of this method correlate vegetative shadows on a stream channel with reduced infrared radiation (IR) reception in the radiographic data to suggest that the water temperature is reduced in such areas. Two methods are employed to demonstrate that this interpretation of the data is in error. First, the fundamental principles of thermodynamics are employed to show that if the stream is in fact flowing, the water affected by any cooling process cannot remain in the vicinity where it was cooled. Second, temperature data taken from a stream channel are used to show that the water flowing in the channel is essentially unaffected by the patterns of vegetative shade on the surface of the channel.

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