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Advancing Field-Based GNSS Surveying for Validation of Remotely Sensed Water Surface Elevation Products

Authors :
E. D. Kyzivat
S. Topp
Annie Zaino
Philip Marsh
Jessica V. Fayne
Jasmine S S Hansen
C. Onclin
Colin J. Gleason
Joe Pettit
Muriel Berge-Nguyen
Lincoln H. Pitcher
Robert Carlson
Jean-François Crétaux
Sarah W. Cooley
Laurence C. Smith
Daqing Yang
Nasim Hosseini
Tom Carter
A. Pietroniro
M. Harlan
J. Toby Minear
Kelly Easterday
W. Dolan
E. Wilcox
Tamlin M. Pavelsky
T. Langhorst
Michael J. Willis
Daniel Medeiros Moreira
Source :
Frontiers in Earth Science, Vol 8 (2020)
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Frontiers Media SA, 2020.

Abstract

Surface water resources are vital for biological, physical, and socioeconomic processes on the Earth’s surface. To advance monitoring capabilities of these resources, new remote sensing technologies including the forthcoming Surface Water and Ocean Topography (SWOT) satellite (expected launch 2022) and its experimental airborne prototype AirSWOT are being developed to repeatedly map water surface elevation (WSE) and slope (WSS) of the world’s rivers, lakes, and reservoirs. However, the vertical accuracies of these novel technologies are largely unverified thus standard and repeatable field procedures to validate remotely sensed WSE and WSS are needed. To that end, we designed, engineered and operationalized a Water Surface Profiler (WaSP) system that efficiently and accurately surveys WSE and WSS in a variety of surface water environments using Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS) time-averaged measurements with Precise Point Positioning (PPP) corrections. Here, we present WaSP construction, deployment, and a data processing workflow. We demonstrate WaSP data collections from repeat field deployments in the North Saskatchewan River and three prairie pothole lakes near Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada. We find that WaSP reproducibly measures WSE and WSS with vertical accuracies similar to standard field survey methods (WSE RMSD ~8 cm, WSS RMSD ~1.3 cm/km), and that repeat WaSP deployments accurately quantify water level changes (RMSD ~3 cm). Collectively, these results suggest that WaSP is an easily-deployed, self-contained system with sufficient accuracy for validating the decimeter level expected accuracies of SWOT and AirSWOT. We conclude by discussing the utility of WaSP for validating airborne and spaceborne WSE mappings, present 63 WaSP in-situ lake WSE measurements collected in support of NASA’s Arctic Boreal and Vulnerability Experiment (ABoVE), highlight routine deployment in support of the Lake Observation by Citizen Scientists and Satellites (LOCSS) project, and explore WaSP utility for validating a novel GNSS interferometric reflectometry (GNSS-IR) LArge Wave Warning System (LAWWS).

Details

ISSN :
22966463
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Frontiers in Earth Science
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d848b9b6b58eb4420afdb2e4240f6fee