Title :
Optical flow analysis of the aurora borealis
Author :
Blixt, Erik Mårten ; Semeter, Joshua ; Ivchenko, Nickolay
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Univ. of Tromso, Norway
Abstract :
Optical observations of the aurora have traditionally focused on the structure, intensity, and wavelength of the emissions. But the apparent motion of auroral forms offers another important diagnostic tool for investigating this poorly understood phenomenon. Prior analyses of auroral motion have focused on tracing individual features. In this letter, we investigate the feasibility of deriving the entire two-dimensional velocity field automatically using robust optical flow estimation. The analysis is applied to two narrow-field video sequences. Both examples are rich in small-scale structure and motion, but appear very different to the eye. The robust optical flow estimator performed well for regions of dense turbulent motion, while sheared flow and flow which is perpendicular to image intensity gradients, was poorly resolved. The relative magnitude of the outliers provides a quantitative measure of the validity of the underlying flow model and, hence, a means of automatically differentiating among auroral forms with differing physical origins. The technique can be used to deduce ionospheric electric fields and neutral winds, and the flow fields yield important physical information about the generation mechanism.
Keywords :
aurora; geophysical signal processing; image motion analysis; image sequences; ionosphere; ionospheric techniques; remote sensing; wind; 2D velocity field; aurora borealis; auroral motion; dense turbulent motion; emission intensity; emission structure; emission wavelength; image intensity gradients; ionospheric electric fields; narrow-field video sequences; neutral winds; optical flow analysis; optical flow estimator; optical observations; robust statistics; sheared flow; Acceleration; Atmosphere; Image motion analysis; Image sequence analysis; Ionosphere; Magnetosphere; Motion estimation; Plasma accelerators; Robustness; Stimulated emission; Aurora borealis; optical flow; robust statistics;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Letters, IEEE
DOI :
10.1109/LGRS.2005.860981