5 - ADVANTAGES AND LIMITATIONS. PROSPECTS FOR FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
Relying on the data presented, the major advantages of lidar technique applied
to sea investigation and survey are:
(1) capability of remote high-resolution (10-100 m) monitoring over large
areas (up to synoptic scale);
(2) relatively weak dependence upon weather conditions;
(3) capacity for day-and-night continuous measurements;
(4) full automatization of measuring and primary data processing.
These features allow to consider the lidar-fluorosensor as promising tool
for monitoring in the sea. Recently the airborne lidar system (see Grüner et
al., 1991) have been accepted in Germany for operational use in the German
parts of the North and Baltic seas (Dr. R. Reuter, personal communication; see
also Reuter et al., 1994b). A flight schedule of about 1000 hours per year is
anticipated. The objects of monitoring are oil spills and chemical discharges,
as well as chlorophyll, yellow substances and turbidity.
Nevertheless a number of problems (e.g. see Chekalyuk and Gorbunov,
1993) must be solved to provide transfer of laser remote sensing from research
environment to the wide operational use in marine and coastal applications.
One of the shortcomings of lidar-fluorosensor technique is still some
difficulties in developing the reliable and universal algorithms for accurate
estimating practically important characteristics of sounding objects (phyto
plankton pigments concentrations, biomass, species composition, rate of
photosynthesis, dissolved organic matter and oil pollution contents in the
water, thickness of oil film at the surface, etc.). In fact, the problems
related to data interpretation originate not from drawbacks of lidar technique
per se. They are defined to a large extent by complex nature of investigated
objects, as well as by variability of their characteristics in sea
environment.
The certain progress have been observed in overcoming these difficulties
in recent years. The novel approach to discriminating the fluorescence contri
butions of DOM and oil products is described in (Patsaeva, 1994). The promis
ing results based on classification of oil spectral signatures were obtained
by Hengstermann and Reuter (1991, 1994). The lidar implementation of pump-and-
probe technique for estimates of phytoplankton photosynthetic efficiency and
chlorophyll was developed by Chekalyuk and Gorbunov (1992b, 1994). The
problems related to interpretation of laser-induced Chl-a fluorescence are
discussed in (Gorbunov and Chekalyuk, 1994), relying on theoretical descrip
tion of primary processes in photosynthetic apparatus of phytoplankton.
Concerning methodology of lidar application, some problems were caused by
generally narrow track (less than 1 m) of laser sounding during along-track
measurements. It complicated the analysis of spatial distributions of
monitored parameters and limited spatial resolution across the track of
carrier. The promising way to overcoming the related problems is utilization
of an optical scanner (Grüner et al., 1991), providing two-dimensional mapping
and ensuring spatial resolution of 10 m and a swath width of 150 m at the
operational altitude of 1000 m.
The common problem typical for majority of remote sensing techniques
(both passive and active) is inability to provide vertical profiling even
within near-surface water layer. Although the lidar systems possess an obvious
potential in this field, for a long time the attempts to implement this were
based just on detection the backscattered laser irradiation. From this point
the recent development of shipborne lidar-fluorosensor, capable for time
resolved spectral measurements looks very promising. The vertical resolution
of 0.2 m and optical depths of 4 to 6 attenuation lengths have been achieved
in the field with laser excitation at 532 nm.
With regard to the platforms, probably a helicopter may be considered as
the most underestimated potential carrier for lidar-fluorosensor. As this