Publications

Lin, HJ; Yu, Q; Wang, YW; Gao, S (2022). Assessment of the potential for quantifying multi-period suspended sediment concentration variations using satellites with different temporal resolution. SCIENCE OF THE TOTAL ENVIRONMENT, 853, 158463.

Abstract
Suspended sediment concentration (SSC) is a crucial indicator for coastal health and geomorphological evolution, featured by complex periodic processes on multiple timescales in response to different cyclic forcing factors. Although remote sensing has functioned as an important means for SSC estimation with sufficient spatio-temporal coverage, the low effective sampling rates and resulting unevenly spaced characteristics of the retrieved time series would hamper the extraction of the representative SSC portrayal (amplitude and phase) on multiple timescales, especially for low -resolution satellites. Here, we retrieved a 9-year hourly GOCI SSC time series (January 2012 to December 2020) at two coastal sites in China (Haimen and Haizhou Bay) as reference cases, and utilized them to obtain MODIS, Sentinel and Landsat sequences with average temporal resolutions of 0.5, 5.6 and 11.2 days as preliminary investigations into amplitude and phase extractions. Furthermore, we generated GOCI-based hypothetical satellite time series with tem-poral resolutions ranging from 1 to 16 days (1088 subsets) and their mutual combination (591,328 subsets) to explore general laws when extracting amplitudes and phases from satellites with different temporal resolutions by application of the Lomb-Scargle Periodogram and phase-folded diagram methods. The amplitude and phase deviations were found to increase with decreasing temporal resolution on seasonal and fortnightly timescales at Haimen and in Haizhou Bay, while by mutual combination of satellites the errors could be reduced as more data were utilized for the extraction. It is shown that larger amplitude and phase deviations occur on the seasonal timescale in comparison to the fortnightly timescale at Haimen, whereas the situation reverses in the case of Haizhou Bay. These results demonstrate that tempo-ral resolution, data characteristics on the target timescale and absolute SSC amplitude codetermine the extraction ac-curacy. This further indicates that satellites with lower temporal resolutions can potentially be used on a global scale for extracting the feature changes of multi-period SSC variations, in particular as continuous improvements in data quantity and quality can be expected in the future.

DOI:
10.1016/j.scitotenv.2022.158463

ISSN:
1879-1026