Title :
Evaluation of the potential of Hyperion data to estimate wildfire hazard in the Santa Ynez front range, Santa Barbara, California
Author :
Ustin, S.L. ; Roberts, D.A. ; Gardner, M. ; Dennison, P.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Land Air & Water Resources, California Univ., Davis, CA, USA
Abstract :
Wildfire hazard is a worldwide problem with enormous environmental, economic, and social costs. Better methods are needed to assess risk to more effectively manage natural resources. Current models need spatially explicit, timely, information about surface conditions. Meeting this need requires development of remotely sensed model inputs. Critical remotely sensed parameters needed for wildfire hazard assessment include surface reflectance, canopy water content, species composition and fuel state. Semiarid shrublands have been difficult to assess and monitor using multispectral satellite data because their spectral bands and wavelength locations are not sensitive to these input parameters, however, such inputs have been demonstrated using AVIRIS data. We compare near simultaneous acquisition of Hyperion (12/06/01) and AVIRIS (14/06/01) data for retrieval of surface reflectance. For both instruments, field spectra were acquired to support reflectance retrieval. Hyperion and AVIRIS spectra are similar in shape and albedo but SNR is 5 times higher in AVIRIS. Fuel condition was assessed using the endmember fractions from spectral mixture analysis, with Hyperion and AVIRIS providing similar fractions. Canopy water content was compared using the 1200 nm liquid water band and two water indices, the Water Index and the Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI). Results show poor Hyperion performance relative to AVIRIS.
Keywords :
fires; forestry; geophysical techniques; vegetation mapping; 400 to 2500 nm; California; Hyperion; IR; Santa Barbara; Santa Ynez Front Range; USA; United States; canopy water content; combustible matter; forest fire; fuel; geophysical measurement technique; hyperspectral remote sensing; infrared; land surface; multispectral remote sensing; semiarid shrubland; surface reflectance; terrain mapping; vegetation mapping; visible; wildfire hazard; Condition monitoring; Costs; Environmental economics; Fuel economy; Hazards; Reflectivity; Remote monitoring; Resource management; Risk management; Water resources;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2002. IGARSS '02. 2002 IEEE International
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7536-X
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2002.1025689