Spatiotemporal ICA/PCA decomposition of optical displacement field stacks: perspective for landslide time series inversion

Author(s):  
Floriane Provost ◽  
Jean-Philippe Malet

<p>Monitoring ground surface motion is a key information to locate active landslides and possibly detect failure onsets but also to better understand their mechanical behavior in relation with environmental forcing. In-situ and remote technologies are available to provide measures of the ground displacement with different advantages and limitations (in terms of spatial coverage, sampling frequency, etc.). Image matching techniques have been commonly used to detect and measure landslide acceleration but this is often limited to a small amount of images. In the recent years, the number of optical satellite constellations have significantly increased providing global coverage with a frequent revisit time at medium to high spatial resolution and an open access policy (e.g. Sentinel 2, Landsat 7/8). These datasets present new perspectives for the monitoring of slow (cm/day) to moderate (m/month) landslide motion and poses challenges to discriminate between the different spatio-temporal sources (e.g. rainfall correlated signal, noise, seasonal signal, etc.) present in the time -series. </p><p>We investigate the use of spatiotemporal ICA/PCA decomposition on optical displacement stacks of landslide areas. The main goal aims at testing 1) the capability of ICA/PCA analysis to detect relevant deformation deformation sources in the case of landslide monitoring and 2) the possibility to improve the time-series inversion of landslide motion by removing spatiotemporal sources that can result from seasonal sun exposition or geometric inaccuracies. We use the MPIC-OPT-Slide service of the GeoHazards Exploitation Platform (GEP) to compute several correlograms and displacement fields (>500 per site) from Sentinel-2 acquisitions on the slow-moving La Valette landslide (Alpes-de-Haute-Provence, France) and the moderately-moving Aiguilles-Pas de l’Ours landslide (Hautes-Alpes, France). We show that in case of steady-state deformation, the noise can be significantly removed around the active parts of the slope. In the case of more complex deformation evolution, pertinent sources can be manually isolated but the choice of the number of sources and their automatic selection remain challenging. </p>

2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 1876 ◽  
Author(s):  
Katsuto Shimizu ◽  
Tetsuji Ota ◽  
Nobuya Mizoue ◽  
Hideki Saito

Developing accurate methods for estimating forest structures is essential for efficient forest management. The high spatial and temporal resolution data acquired by CubeSat satellites have desirable characteristics for mapping large-scale forest structural attributes. However, most studies have used a median composite or single image for analyses. The multi-temporal use of CubeSat data may improve prediction accuracy. This study evaluates the capabilities of PlanetScope CubeSat data to estimate canopy height derived from airborne Light Detection and Ranging (LiDAR) by comparing estimates using Sentinel-2 and Landsat 8 data. Random forest (RF) models using a single composite, multi-seasonal composites, and time-series data were investigated at different spatial resolutions of 3, 10, 20, and 30 m. The highest prediction accuracy was obtained by the PlanetScope multi-seasonal composites at 3 m (relative root mean squared error: 51.3%) and Sentinel-2 multi-seasonal composites at the other spatial resolutions (40.5%, 35.2%, and 34.2% for 10, 20, and 30 m, respectively). The results show that RF models using multi-seasonal composites are 1.4% more accurate than those using harmonic metrics from time-series data in the median. PlanetScope is recommended for canopy height mapping at finer spatial resolutions. However, the unique characteristics of PlanetScope data in a spatial and temporal context should be further investigated for operational forest monitoring.


2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 205
Author(s):  
Philipp Hochreuther ◽  
Niklas Neckel ◽  
Nathalie Reimann ◽  
Angelika Humbert ◽  
Matthias Braun

The usability of multispectral satellite data for detecting and monitoring supraglacial meltwater ponds has been demonstrated for western Greenland. For a multitemporal analysis of large regions or entire Greenland, largely automated processing routines are required. Here, we present a sequence of algorithms that allow for an automated Sentinel-2 data search, download, processing, and generation of a consistent and dense melt pond area time-series based on open-source software. We test our approach for a ~82,000 km2 area at the 79°N Glacier (Nioghalvfjerdsbrae) in northeast Greenland, covering the years 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019. Our lake detection is based on the ratio of the blue and red visible bands using a minimum threshold. To remove false classification caused by the similar spectra of shadow and water on ice, we implement a shadow model to mask out topographically induced artifacts. We identified 880 individual lakes, traceable over 479 time-steps throughout 2016–2019, with an average size of 64,212 m2. Of the four years, 2019 had the most extensive lake area coverage with a maximum of 333 km2 and a maximum individual lake size of 30 km2. With 1.5 days average observation interval, our time-series allows for a comparison with climate data of daily resolution, enabling a better understanding of short-term climate-glacier feedbacks.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (11) ◽  
pp. 4661-4679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Bin Cao ◽  
Xiaojing Quan ◽  
Nicholas Brown ◽  
Emilie Stewart-Jones ◽  
Stephan Gruber

Abstract. Simulations of land-surface processes and phenomena often require driving time series of meteorological variables. Corresponding observations, however, are unavailable in most locations, even more so, when considering the duration, continuity and data quality required. Atmospheric reanalyses provide global coverage of relevant meteorological variables, but their use is largely restricted to grid-based studies. This is because technical challenges limit the ease with which reanalysis data can be applied to models at the site scale. We present the software toolkit GlobSim, which automates the downloading, interpolation and scaling of different reanalyses – currently ERA5, ERA-Interim, JRA-55 and MERRA-2 – to produce meteorological time series for user-defined point locations. The resulting data have consistent structure and units to efficiently support ensemble simulation. The utility of GlobSim is demonstrated using an application in permafrost research. We perform ensemble simulations of ground-surface temperature for 10 terrain types in a remote tundra area in northern Canada and compare the results with observations. Simulation results reproduced seasonal cycles and variation between terrain types well, demonstrating that GlobSim can support efficient land-surface simulations. Ensemble means often yielded better accuracy than individual simulations and ensemble ranges additionally provide indications of uncertainty arising from uncertain input. By improving the usability of reanalyses for research requiring time series of climate variables for point locations, GlobSim can enable a wide range of simulation studies and model evaluations that previously were impeded by technical hurdles in obtaining suitable data.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andre C. Kalia

<p>Landslide activity is an important information for landslide hazard assessment. However, an information gap regarding up to date landslide activity is often present. Advanced differential interferometric SAR processing techniques (A-DInSAR), e.g. Persistent Scatterer Interferometry (PSI) and Small Baseline Subset (SBAS) are able to measure surface displacements with high precision, large spatial coverage and high spatial sampling density. Although the huge amount of measurement points is clearly an improvement, the practical usage is mainly based on visual interpretation. This is time-consuming, subjective and error prone due to e.g. outliers. The motivation of this work is to increase the automatization with respect to the information extraction regarding landslide activity.</p><p>This study focuses on the spatial density of multiple PSI/SBAS results and a post-processing workflow to semi-automatically detect active landslides. The proposed detection of active landslides is based on the detection of Active Deformation Areas (ADA) and a subsequent classification of the time series. The detection of ADA consists of a filtering of the A-DInSAR data, a velocity threshold and a spatial clustering algorithm (Barra et al., 2017). The classification of the A-DInSAR time series uses a conditional sequence of statistical tests to classify the time series into a-priori defined deformation patterns (Berti et al., 2013). Field investigations and thematic data verify the plausibility of the results. Subsequently the classification results are combined to provide a layer consisting of ADA including information regarding the deformation pattern through time.</p>


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Luojia Hu ◽  
Wei Yao ◽  
Zhitong Yu ◽  
Yan Huang

<p>A high resolution mangrove map (e.g., 10-m), which can identify mangrove patches with small size (< 1 ha), is a central component to quantify ecosystem functions and help government take effective steps to protect mangroves, because the increasing small mangrove patches, due to artificial destruction and plantation of new mangrove trees, are vulnerable to climate change and sea level rise, and important for estimating mangrove habitat connectivity with adjacent coastal ecosystems as well as reducing the uncertainty of carbon storage estimation. However, latest national scale mangrove forest maps mainly derived from Landsat imagery with 30-m resolution are relatively coarse to accurately characterize the distribution of mangrove forests, especially those of small size (area < 1 ha). Sentinel imagery with 10-m resolution provide the opportunity for identifying these small mangrove patches and generating high-resolution mangrove forest maps. Here, we used spectral/backscatter-temporal variability metrics (quantiles) derived from Sentinel-1 SAR (Synthetic Aperture Radar) and sentinel-2 MSI (Multispectral Instrument) time-series imagery as input features for random forest to classify mangroves in China. We found that Sentinel-2 imagery is more effective than Sentinel-1 in mangrove extraction, and a combination of SAR and MSI imagery can get a better accuracy (F1-score of 0.94) than using them separately (F1-score of 0.88 using Sentinel-1 only and 0.895 using Sentinel-2 only). The 10-m mangrove map derived by combining SAR and MSI data identified 20,003 ha mangroves in China and the areas of small mangrove patches (< 1 ha) was 1741 ha, occupying 8.7% of the whole mangrove area. The largest area (819 ha) of small mangrove patches is located in Guangdong Province, and in Fujian the percentage of small mangrove patches in total mangrove area is the highest (11.4%). A comparison with existing 30-m mangrove products showed noticeable disagreement, indicating the necessity for generating mangrove extent product with 10-m resolution. This study demonstrates the significant potential of using Sentinel-1 and Sentinel-2 images to produce an accurate and high-resolution mangrove forest map with Google Earth Engine (GEE). The mangrove forest maps are expected to provide critical information to conservation managers, scientists, and other stakeholders in monitoring the dynamics of mangrove forest.</p>


2018 ◽  
Vol 7 (10) ◽  
pp. 405 ◽  
Author(s):  
Urška Kanjir ◽  
Nataša Đurić ◽  
Tatjana Veljanovski

The European Common Agricultural Policy (CAP) post-2020 timeframe reform will reshape the agriculture land use control procedures from a selected risk fields-based approach into an all-inclusive one. The reform fosters the use of Sentinel data with the objective of enabling greater transparency and comparability of CAP results in different Member States. In this paper, we investigate the analysis of a time series approach using Sentinel-2 images and the suitability of the BFAST (Breaks for Additive Season and Trend) Monitor method to detect changes that correspond to land use anomaly observations in the assessment of agricultural parcel management activities. We focus on identifying certain signs of ineligible (inconsistent) use in permanent meadows and crop fields in one growing season, and in particular those that can be associated with time-defined greenness (vegetation vigor). Depending on the requirements of the BFAST Monitor method and currently time-limited Sentinel-2 dataset for the reliable anomaly study, we introduce customized procedures to support and verify the BFAST Monitor anomaly detection results using the analysis of NDVI (Normalized Difference Vegetation Index) object-based temporal profiles and time-series standard deviation output, where geographical objects of interest are parcels of particular land use. The validation of land use candidate anomalies in view of land use ineligibilities was performed with the information on declared land annual use and field controls, as obtained in the framework of subsidy granting in Slovenia. The results confirm that the proposed combined approach proves efficient to deal with short time series and yields high accuracy rates in monitoring agricultural parcel greenness. As such it can already be introduced to help the process of agricultural land use control within certain CAP activities in the preparation and adaptation phase.


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