A High-Resolution Flood Inundation Archive (2016–the Present) from Sentinel-1 SAR Imagery over CONUS

Author:

Yang Qing1,Shen Xinyi2,Anagnostou Emmanouil N.2,Mo Chongxun3,Eggleston Jack R.4,Kettner Albert J.5

Affiliation:

1. College of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Guangxi University, Nanning, Guangxi, China, and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut

2. Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut

3. College of Civil Engineering and Architecture, Guangxi University, Nanning, Guangxi, China

4. WMA Hydrologic Remote Sensing Branch, U.S. Geological Survey, Leetown, West Virginia

5. Dartmouth Flood Observatory, Community Surface Dynamics Modeling System, Institute of Arctic and Alpine Research, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, Colorado

Abstract

AbstractMost existing inundation inventories are based on surveys, news, or passive remote sensing imagery. Affected by spatiotemporal resolution or weather conditions, these inventories are limited in spatial details or coverage. Satellite synthetic aperture radar (SAR) data have recently enabled flood mapping at unprecedented spatiotemporal resolution. However, the bottleneck in producing SAR-based flood maps is the requirement of expert manual processing to maintain acceptable accuracy by most SAR-driven mapping techniques. To fill the vacancy, we generate a high-resolution (10 m) flood inundation dataset over the contiguous United States (CONUS) from nearly the entire Sentinel-1 SAR archive (from January 2016 to the present), using a recently developed automated Radar Produced Inundation Diary (RAPID) system. RAPID uses U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) water watch system and accumulated precipitation to identify SAR images that potentially overlap a flood event. The dataset include inundation events with the temporal scale from several days to months. Concluded from all 559 overlapping images in the period from 2016 to the first half of 2019, the comparison of the proposed dataset against the USGS Dynamic Surface Water Extent (DSWE) product yields an overall, user, producer agreements, and critical success index of 99.06%, 87.63%, 91.76%, and 81.23%, respectively, demonstrating the high accuracy of the proposed dataset and the robustness of the automated system. We anticipate this archive to facilitate many applications, including large-scale flood loss and risk assessment, and inundation model calibration and validation.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science

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