• Title of article

    Airborne sensors for detecting large marine debris at sea

  • Author/Authors

    Veenstra، نويسنده , , Timothy S. and Churnside، نويسنده , , James H.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
  • Pages
    6
  • From page
    63
  • To page
    68
  • Abstract
    The human eye is an excellent, general-purpose airborne sensor for detecting marine debris larger than 10 cm on or near the surface of the water. Coupled with the human brain, it can adjust for light conditions and sea-surface roughness, track persistence, differentiate color and texture, detect change in movement, and combine all of the available information to detect and identify marine debris. Matching this performance with computers and sensors is difficult at best. However, there are distinct advantages over the human eye and brain that sensors and computers can offer such as the ability to use finer spectral resolution, to work outside the spectral range of human vision, to control the illumination, to process the information in ways unavailable to the human vision system, to provide a more objective and reproducible result, to operate from unmanned aircraft, and to provide a permanent record that can be used for later analysis.
  • Keywords
    Marine debris , Derelict fishing gear , North pacific subtropical convergence , Ghost nets , Remote sensing
  • Journal title
    Marine Pollution Bulletin
  • Serial Year
    2012
  • Journal title
    Marine Pollution Bulletin
  • Record number

    1987253