Publication Type : Conference Paper
Thematic Areas : Wireless Network and Application
Publisher : The American Geophysical Union (AGU) (Oral Presentation), New Orleans, Louisiana, USA.
Source : The American Geophysical Union (AGU) (Oral Presentation), New Orleans, Louisiana, USA (2017)
Campus : Amritapuri
School : Centre for Cybersecurity Systems and Networks, School of Engineering
Center : Amrita Center for Wireless Networks and Applications (AmritaWNA)
Department : Wireless Networks and Applications (AWNA)
Year : 2017
Abstract : The amount of water stored in a given region (total water storage) changes in response to changes in the hydrologic balance (inputs minus outputs). Closing this balance is exceedingly difficult due to the sparsity of field observation, large uncertainties in satellite derived estimates and model limitation. Different regions have distinct reliability on different hydrological parameters. For example, at a higher latitude precipitation is more uncertain than evapotranspiration (ET) while at lower/middle latitude the opposite is true. This study explores alternative estimates of regional hydrological fluxes by integrating the total water storage estimated by the GRACE gravity fields, and improved estimates lake storage variation by Landsat based land-water classification and satellite altimetry based water height measurements. In particular, an alternative ET estimate is generated for the Aral Sea region by integrating multi-sensor remote sensing data. In an endorheic lake like the Aral Sea, its volumetric variations are predominately governed by changes in inflow, evaporation from the water body and precipitation on the lake. The Aral Sea water volume is estimated at a monthly time step by the combination of Landsat land-water classification and ocean radar altimetry (Jason 1 and Jason 2) observations using truncated pyramid method. Considering gauge based river runoff as a true observation and given the fact that there is less variability between multiple precipitation datasets (TRMM, GPCP, GPCC, and ERA), ET can be considered as a most uncertain parameter in this region. The estimated lake volume acts as a controlling factor to estimate ET as the residual of the changes in TWS minus inflow plus precipitation. The estimated ET is compared with the MODIS-based evaporation observations.
Cite this Research Publication : Alka Singh, Behrangi, A., Fisher, J., Reager, J. T., and Gardner, A. S., “Utilizing a suite of satellite missions to address poorly constrained hydrological fluxes”, in The American Geophysical Union (AGU) (Oral Presentation), New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, 2017.