Siting Considerations for Satellite Observation of River Discharge

Author:

Eggleston Jack1ORCID,Mason Chris2ORCID,Bjerklie Dave3ORCID,Durand Mike4ORCID,Dudley Rob5ORCID,Harlan Merritt6ORCID

Affiliation:

1. U.S. Geological Survey Hydrologic Remote Sensing Branch Leetown WV USA

2. U.S. Geological Survey Virginia‐West Virginia Water Science Center Richmond VA USA

3. U.S. Geological Survey New England Water Science Center East Hartford CT USA

4. School of Earth Sciences and Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center Ohio State University Columbus OH USA

5. U.S. Geological Survey New England Water Science Center Pembroke NH USA

6. U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) Hydrologic Remote Sensing Branch Lakewood CO USA

Abstract

AbstractWith growing global capability for satellite measurement of river discharge (flow) comes a need to understand and reduce error in satellite‐based discharge measurements. Satellite‐based discharge estimates are based on measurements of water surface width, elevation, slope, and potentially velocity. Site selection is important for reducing error and uncertainty in both conventional and satellite‐based discharge measurements because geomorphic river characteristics have strong control over the relationships between discharge and width, water surface elevation (or depth), slope, and velocity. A large ground‐truth data set of 8,445 conventional hydraulic measurements, collected by acoustic Doppler current profilers at 503 stations in the United States, was developed and quality assured to examine correlation between river discharge and water surface width, depth, velocity, and cross‐sectional area. A separate database of river surface slope and discharge time‐series was developed from paired continuous monitoring stations to examine slope‐discharge correlations. Results show that discharge correlates most strongly with velocity, cross‐sectional area, depth, width, and slope, in that order. Uncertainty of satellite discharge estimates is affected by observed hydraulic variable and reach‐specific variability in observed variable(s) characteristics including range of variability, georegistration accuracy, and stability over time of relationships between discharge and observed hydraulic variable.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

Reference44 articles.

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