DocumentCode
2109765
Title
The MODIS rapid response project
Author
Descloitres, J. ; Sohlberg, R. ; Owens, J. ; Giglio, L. ; Justice, C. ; Carroll, M. ; Seaton, J. ; Crisologo, M. ; Finco, M. ; Lannom, K. ; Bobbe, T.
Author_Institution
Sci. Syst. & Applications Inc, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
Volume
2
fYear
2002
fDate
24-28 June 2002
Firstpage
1191
Abstract
The Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument on board the Terra satellite offers an unprecedented combination of daily spatial coverage, spatial resolution, and spectral characteristics. These capabilities make MODIS ideal to observe a variety of rapid events: active fires, floods, smoke transport, dust storms, severe storms, iceberg calving, and volcanic eruptions. A new processing system has been developed at NASA´s Goddard Space Flight Center to provide a rapid response to those events, with initial emphasis on active fire detection and 250-m resolution imagery. MODIS data of most of the Earth´s land surface is processed within a few hours of data acquisition. Collaboration between NASA, the University of Maryland and the USDA Forest Service has been developed to provide fire information derived from MODIS to the fire managers. Active fire locations in the conterminous United States are produced by the MODIS Rapid Response System and communicated to the Forest Service within a few minutes of production. These active fire locations are used to generate regional fire maps, updated daily and provided to the fire managers to help them allocate adequate resources to firefighters. Active fire locations are also distributed to the Global Observation of Forest Cover (GOFC) user community through a Web interface integrating MODIS active fire locations and geographic information system datasets.
Keywords
fires; remote sensing; smoke; GOFC; Global Observation of Forest Cover; MODIS instrument; MODIS rapid response project; Moderate-resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer; Terra satellite; USDA Forest Service; Web interface; active fire detection; active fires; daily spatial coverage; data acquisition; dust storms; fire locations; floods; geographic information system datasets; iceberg calving; land surface; regional fire maps; severe storms; smoke transport; spatial resolution; spectral characteristics; volcanic eruptions; Event detection; Fires; Floods; Image resolution; Instruments; MODIS; Resource management; Satellites; Spatial resolution; Storms;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2002. IGARSS '02. 2002 IEEE International
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7536-X
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2002.1025879
Filename
1025879
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