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WATER WORLD
Shedding light on shallow waters
by Staff Writers
Paris (ESA) Aug 28, 2018

Low-orbiting satellites equipped with light-measuring sensors can record how much light is reflected off the seabed, gathering and updating the information continually as they fly over. An ESA-backed group, led by TCarta, has developed a way of using this data to produce water depth maps, and make them available to anyone who could use them.

Keeping an eye on our waters is more important than ever, as widespread drought continues to sweep Europe this summer.

Earth's changing sea levels are crucial indicators of how our environment is fairing, but monitoring it manually can be a labour-intensive, expensive, and at times even dangerous task.

Coastal areas provide additional complications, as shifting seabeds and currents make creating accurate and consistent water depth maps - also known as bathymetry - almost impossible.

Satellites are ideally placed to address this challenge, however. Low-orbiting satellites equipped with light-measuring sensors can record how much light is reflected off the seabed, gathering and updating the information continually as they fly over.

An ESA-backed group, led by TCarta, has developed a way of using this data to produce water depth maps, and make them available to anyone who could use them.

Richard Flemmings, Operations Director for TCarta, said: "The team applies computer algorithms to satellite imagery from sources like Landsat, Sentinel-2 and DigitalGlobe's WorldView constellation.

"These algorithms analyse the images' light frequency from different parts of the satellite's spectral range, and work with existing points of reference, such as confirmed results drawn from similar readings elsewhere, and knowledge on how different types of seabed reflect the light.

"These products are hosted on the Bathymetrics Data Portal, which provides ready-made, instantly available and high resolution bathymetry at a fraction of the cost of traditional methods."

Different satellites can generate different resolution images, with Copernicus's Sentinel-2 wide swath high-resolution multispectral imager producing around 10m, for example, although the portal also hosts resolutions of up to 2m.

Detailed information on water levels that can be obtained immediately is extremely valuable for environmental agencies, but also has other uses.

Industries that conduct their business in or through the water require this kind of data to do so in the safest and most cost-effective manner.

Energy infrastructure development, for example, requires up-to-date information on water depths over large areas to identify the best routes to lay pipes, while port construction needs reliable and long-term data for a concentrated location, in order to plan when and how the structure should be built.

The Bathymetrics Data Portal was launched with help from ESA's Business Applications programme, which co-funded an earlier, demonstration version.

ESA's Business Applications programme is the mark of Europe's best commercial ventures powered by Space. It is the commercial arm of the European Space Agency and aims to prove that space is open for business with the power to improve everyday life.

Since the programme's inception in 2008, ESA Business Applications has invested more than euro 200M in over 500 business ideas addressing markets in industries worldwide, like the Bathymetrics Data Portal.

Typical funding ranges from euro 60k to euro 2M and is used from early stage feasibility studies to large-scale demonstration projects.


Related Links
Telecommunications and Integrated Applications at ESA
Water News - Science, Technology and Politics


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WATER WORLD
UConn scientists create reverse osmosis membranes with tunable thickness
Storrs CT (SPX) Aug 23, 2018
Currently, more than 300 million people around the world rely on desalinated water for part or all of their daily needs. That demand will only grow with larger populations and improved standards of living around the world. Accessing the oceans for drinking water, however, requires desalination technologies that are complicated and expensive. The most commonly used technology for desalination is reverse osmosis (RO), a process in which seawater is forced through a membrane capable of removing salts ... read more

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