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Monitoring Continental Surface Waters by Satellite Altimetry

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TLDR
In this article, satellite altimetry has been used to provide complementary data that can be used to create hydrological products, such as time series of stages, estimated discharges of rivers or volume change of lakes, river altitude profiles or leveling of in situ stations.
Abstract
The monitoring of continental water stages is a requirement for meeting human needs and assessing ongoing climatic changes. However, regular gauging networks fail to provide the information needed for spatial coverage and timely delivery. Although the space missions discussed here were not primarily dedicated to hydrology, 18 years of satellite altimetry have furnished complementary data that can be used to create hydrological products, such as time series of stages, estimated discharges of rivers or volume change of lakes, river altitude profiles or leveling of in situ stations. Raw data still suffer uncertainties of one to several decimeters. These require specific reprocessing such as waveform retracking or geophysical correction editing; much work still remains to be done. Besides, measuring the flow velocity appears feasible owing to SAR interferometer techniques. Inundated surfaces, and the time variations of their extent, are currently almost routinely computed using satellite imagery. Thus, the compilation of the continuous efforts of the scientific community in these various investigative directions, such as recording from space the discharges of rivers or the change in water volume stored in lakes, can be foreseen in the near future.

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Citations
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Satellite altimetry and Earth sciences :a handbook of techniques and applications

TL;DR: Satellite altimetry is helping to advance studies of ocean circulation, tides, sea level, surface waves and allowing new insights into marine geodesy as mentioned in this paper, which is for a broad spectrum of academics, graduate students, and researchers in geophysics, oceanography, and the space and earth sciences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interannual variability of surface water extent at the global scale, 1993–2004

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors presented the first global data set that quantifies the monthly distribution of surface water extent at ∼25 km sampling intervals over 12 years (1993-2004) and showed that the data set can be extended with good confidence beyond 2000, using ERS and AVHRR mean monthly climatologies.
Journal ArticleDOI

Water levels in the Amazon basin derived from the ERS 2 and ENVISAT radar altimetry missions

TL;DR: In this paper, the stages of water bodies in the Amazon basin derived from the processing of ERS-2 and ENVISAT satellite altimetry data were analyzed using water level time series over river segments of very different width, from several kilometers to less than a hundred of meters.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimating water volume variations in lakes and reservoirs from four operational satellite altimetry databases and satellite imagery data

TL;DR: In this paper, a new method for estimating water volume changes in lakes and reservoirs from four different satellite altimetry databases in combination with satellite imagery data, without any in-situ measurements and bathymetry maps.
Journal ArticleDOI

Lake Volume Monitoring from Space

TL;DR: A review of some of these methodologies by using lakes over the Tibetan Plateau to illustrate some critical aspects and issues (technical and scientific) linked to the observation of climate change impact on surface waters from remote sensing data is presented in this paper.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Satellite remote sensing of river inundation area, stage, and discharge: a review

TL;DR: In this article, a synergistic approach using single-frequency, fixed-polarization SAR and visible/infrared data will provide the best results over densely vegetated river floodplains.
Journal ArticleDOI

Interferometric radar measurement of ocean surface currents

TL;DR: In this paper, a new method of measuring surface currents using an interferometric synthetic aperture radar is presented, which has been tested over San Francisco Bay near the time of maximum tidal flow, resulting in a map of the east-west component of the current.

Satellite altimetry and Earth sciences :a handbook of techniques and applications

TL;DR: Satellite altimetry is helping to advance studies of ocean circulation, tides, sea level, surface waves and allowing new insights into marine geodesy as mentioned in this paper, which is for a broad spectrum of academics, graduate students, and researchers in geophysics, oceanography, and the space and earth sciences.
Journal ArticleDOI

Exchanges of sediment between the flood plain and channel of the Amazon River in Brazil

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors estimated the magnitude of these exchanges for each of 10 reaches of the Amazon River valley, and combined them with calculations of sediment transport into and out of the reaches based on sediment sampling and flow records to define a sediment budget for each reach.
Book

Satellite altimetry and earth sciences : a handbook of techniques and applications

TL;DR: Satellite altimetry is helping to advance studies of ocean circulation, tides, sea level, surface waves and allowing new insights into marine geodesy as mentioned in this paper, which is for a broad spectrum of academics, graduate students, and researchers in geophysics, oceanography, and the space and earth sciences.
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