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AGU Ocean Sciences Meeting (Feb. 2002) COAST abstracts: |
OS22D-218 Airborne Hyperspectral Ocean Color Measurements off the Oregon Coast Sara M. Haines, John M. Bane, Melanie F. Meaux Department of Marine Sciences, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-3300 Transport during wind-driven events was the primary focus of the Coastal Ocean Advances in Shelf Transport (COAST) project during the Summer of 2001. Hyperspectral remote-sensing and mapping of surface ocean color properties provide a valuable tool for determining the structure and transport of important biological components in the coastal waters. An instrumented light aircraft was used during COAST to remotely measure ocean color and upper-ocean temperature, as well as conduct simultaneous atmospheric measurements of horizontal winds, air temperature, pressure, and humidity. The aircraft provided rapid coverage over the study area along eight 60-80 km cross-shore transects in about 5 hours. Two hyperspectral radiometers were mounted on the aircraft, one to measure downwelling irradiance (Ed) and one to measure upwelling radiance (Lu). Both radiometers have a spectral resolution of ~1.3 nm from 400 nm to 720 nm giving 256 channels in the visible spectrum, capable of sampling at 3 Hz. The spatial resolution of the upwelling radiance measurement is ~10 m when the aircraft is flown at 300 m with one pixel sampling alongtrack of the aircraft. Twenty-seven flights were conducted during the Summer 2001 COAST field project. Several of these flights surveyed the various stages of spin-up, progression, and slackening of upwelling cycles. Preliminary color products show typical distributions of higher chlorophyll concentrations corresponding to cold upwelled waters nearshore, as well as spectrally complex waters near river and bay outflow areas. Also, sequences of flights mapped residual plumes and their movement several days after the upwelling conditions were gone. These and other observations will be presented in detail in this poster. Additional Resources: http://www.marine.unc.edu/cool/COAST |