首页> 外文期刊>Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research >Strategies, insights, and the recent advances in volcanic monitoring and mapping with data from NASA's Earth Observing System
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Strategies, insights, and the recent advances in volcanic monitoring and mapping with data from NASA's Earth Observing System

机译:利用美国国家航空航天局(NASA)地球观测系统的数据进行火山监测和制图的策略,见解和最新进展

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In 1991, the U.S. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) launched a comprehensive program to study the Earth as one environmental system. Now called the Earth Science Enterprise (ESE), this coordinated monitoring effort was initially comprised of free-flying satellites and Space Shuttle missions, as well as airborne and ground-based studies. The satellite component of the ESE is known as the Earth Observing System (EOS), which has now entered a planned long-term global monitoring phase. The first EOS satellite, Terra, was launched in December of 1999 and offers integrated measurements of numerous solid earth and atmospheric processes, including volcanic activity. There are currently 10 NASA EOS-designated satellites carrying over thirty instruments, all of which are providing integrated measurements of the interactions between the Earth's global cycles. Included in this effort are science investigations that examine the solid earth cycle and the natural hazards that are an inevitable result of that cycle. For volcanologists, the new higher spatial, spectral, and temporal resolution EOS data have spawned a variety of new algorithms and methodologies to monitor changes in volcanic activity, map volcanic surfaces, and investigate volcanic processes. Thermal anomaly detection, plume chemistry and mass flux, lava composition and textural properties, interaction of ash with the natural and human environment, and mitigation of hazards are but a few of the topics being addressed with these data sets. In this paper, we summarize the current state of volcanic remote sensing in the new EOS era and introduce the more detailed papers that follow in this special issue. This work stems from a special session at the Fall 2001 American Geophysical Union (AGU) meeting that was convened to showcase the current research in volcanic systems and processes using the new EOS satellite data sets. That session was also intended to provide a forum for field, aircraft, and other satellite-validated observations of volcanic edifices and processes. Our aim in this special issue is to focus on a series of detailed examples where the authors have used EOS data to investigate a specific question, rather than a generalized overview of all possible volcanological applications of remote sensing data.
机译:1991年,美国国家航空航天局(NASA)启动了一项综合计划,将地球作为一个环境系统进行研究。现在被称为地球科学企业(ESE),这种协调的监测工作最初包括自由飞行的卫星和航天飞机的任务,以及机载和地面研究。 ESE的卫星部分被称为地球观测系统(EOS),该系统现已进入计划的长期全球监视阶段。第一枚EOS卫星Terra于1999年12月发射,对包括火山活动在内的众多固体地球和大气过程进行了综合测量。当前有10颗NASA EOS指定的卫星携带30多种仪器,所有这些卫星都提供了对地球全球周期之间相互作用的综合测量。这项工作包括科学研究,以检查固体地球周期和该周期不可避免的自然灾害。对于火山学家来说,新的更高空间,光谱和时间分辨率的EOS数据催生了各种新的算法和方法,可以监测火山活动的变化,绘制火山表面图并研究火山过程。热异常检测,羽流化学和质量通量,熔岩成分和质地特性,灰分与自然和人类环境的相互作用以及减轻危害只是这些数据集所涉及的几个主题。在本文中,我们总结了新EOS时代火山遥感的现状,并介绍了本期特刊中更详细的论文。这项工作源于2001年秋季美国地球物理联合会(AGU)会议上的一次特别会议,该会议旨在展示使用新EOS卫星数据集进行的火山系统和过程的当前研究。该会议还旨在为野外,飞机和其他经卫星验证的火山构造和过程观测提供一个论坛。我们在本期特刊中的目的是集中于一系列详细的示例,在这些示例中,作者使用EOS数据来研究特定问题,而不是对遥感数据的所有可能的火山学应用进行概括的概述。

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