A new data product from ICESat-2 will allow
researchers to study some of the shallow seafloors across the globe, including
the Great Bahama Bank seen here.
NASA/GSFC/Landsat
Researchers have developed a new way to
measure near-shore bathymetry using satellite observations alone. Soon after
NASA’s ICESat-2 satellite launched into orbit in 2018 on a mission to measure
the heights of Earth’s ice, forests, and land cover, scientists examined the
data and found something unexpected. As the laser instrument aboard the Ice,
Cloud, land, Elevation Satellite 2 sent light pulses into certain coastal
waters, the light reached beyond the surface, reflecting off the seafloor and
lakebeds below.
These profiles of the underwater
topography, or bathymetry, provide insights into hard-to-access areas. Shallow
waters can contain crucial habitat as well as pose navigational challenges.
Now, university scientists working with the ICESat-2 mission have developed
a data product that allows researchers, hazard
mappers, and others interested in coastal regions to easily find and use these
bathymetric measurements.
To generate this data product, called ATL24, the team developed algorithms and used machine learning to identify
the water surface as well as the coastal seafloor below.
If the waters are too rough, or too
murky, the green laser light from the satellite’s instrument cannot penetrate
the surface. But when the right conditions align, ICESat-2 can measure the
seafloor down as far as 130 feet (40 meters) beneath the waves.
By: ~Kate Ramsayer
Source: Data from NASA’s ICESat-2 Goes Beyond the Surface - NASA Science
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