ecological infrastructure and nature conservation. With respect to
the latter the emphasis is shifting from rigid maintaining of the
present situation to allowing dynamic processes to take place and
even to actively restore dynamic processes in the area. Through
integral management one tries to involve and balance the various
interest. groups and co-ordinate their activities. Up to date
information is required to effectively carry out the managerial task
concerned.
3.2 A new bathymeric surveying method
The traditional technique to measure sea bottom morphology,
using in-situ shipborne echo sounders, is expensive and time
consuming. Based on nearly 10 years of fundamental and
application research an innovative method has been developed
using radar satellite images, hydro-dynamical models and a
limited set of in-situ depth measurements to assess a bottom depth
chart (Vogelzang et al., 1994). Under favourable meteorological
and hydrodynamic conditions (moderate winds of 3 to 5 m/s and
tidal currents of about 0.5 m/s), airborne or spaceborne Synthetic
Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery shows features of the bottom
topography of shallow seas to a maximum depth of approximately
30 m. The imaging mechanism of mapping sea bottom
topography by imaging radar consists of three stages (e.g.
Calkoen et al., 1993):
- Interaction between (tidal) flow and bottom topography
results in modulations in the (surface) flow velocity. This
relation can be described by several models with an
increasing level of complexity (continuity equation, shallow
water equations, and the Navier Stokes equations).
- Modulations in surface flow velocity cause variations in the
surface wave spectrum. This is modelled with the help of the
action balance equation, using a source term to simulate the
restoring forces of wind input and wave breaking.
- Variations in the surface wave spectrum cause modulations
in the level of radar backscatter. To compute the backscatter
variations a simple Bragg model can be used.
Based on the above three physical mechanisms, a suite of models
has been developed and operationalized. This suite of numerical
models generates the radar backscatter given the bathymetry and
the wind. Because the parameter of interest is the bottom depth it
is necessary to invert this depth-radar backscatter relation.
Therefore, a data assimilation scheme has been developed,
minimizing the difference between the calculated and the
measured radar backscatter by adjusting the bottom topography
(figure 2).
In 1995 a study has been performed to test the method on
accuracy, reliability, cost-effectiveness in a "pseudo" operational
situation. Test sites with various specific morphologic features,
such as shipping lanes, intertidal flats and shallow water sand
waves, were chosen in the Wadden Sea area and in the
Netherlands foreshore area near Rotterdam harbour. The most
important results are :
- Multi-temporal analysis of SAR imagery improves the
accuracy of depth assessments, up to a level comparable to
that of traditional methods, i.e. 30 cm depth accuracy for
monitoring surveys;
- The use of radar remote sensing techniques may reduce
traditional monitoring survey efforts with a factor of
approximately 50 %.
Developing and implementing a method like this as an
operational production process is a time- and money consuming
business. The costs of fundamental and application research are
estimated to be 1.5 million Dutch guilders, while the system
development and implementation costs approach nearly 3 million
guilders in 5 years time. So, the total investment on research and
development approaches 5 million guilders over a period of 15
years (1987-2001). When fully operational this system will
reduce the government expenses on monitoring surveys from 2
million to 1 million a year, therefore a yearly cost-reduction of 1
million is obtained. It is expected that the return on investment of
this system will be reached after 5-7 years.
HENITIAL BOTTOM DEPTH
FLOW MODEL
SHORT WAVE MODEL
ADJUSTED BOTTOM
DEPTH
RADAR BACKSCATTER
MODEL
SIMULATED RADAR
IMAGE
DATA-ASSIMILATIE
ECHO-SOUNDINGS
A
Figure 2: Outline of remote sensing based bathymetric assesment system
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXI, Part B6. Vienna 1996
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