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Dive into the research topics where Brian Brisco is active.

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Featured researches published by Brian Brisco.


international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 1997

First order surface roughness correction of active microwave observations for estimating soil moisture

Thomas J. Jackson; Heather McNairn; Mark A. Weltz; Brian Brisco; R.J. Brown

Surface roughness has a significant effect on the relationship between radar backscatter and soil moisture. In order to use existing radar satellite data for soil moisture, roughness effects must be corrected. A technique is presented that utilizes the data bases from soil erosion studies and soil moisture remote sensing investigations to provide first order estimates of the roughness parameters.


Remote Sensing | 2015

A Collection of SAR Methodologies for Monitoring Wetlands

Lori White; Brian Brisco; Mohammed Dabboor; Andreas Schmitt; Andrew Pratt

Wetlands are an important natural resource that requires monitoring. A key step in environmental monitoring is to map the locations and characteristics of the resource to better enable assessment of change over time. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) systems are helpful in this way for wetland resources because their data can be used to map and monitor changes in surface water extent, saturated soils, flooded vegetation, and changes in wetland vegetation cover. We review a few techniques to demonstrate SAR capabilities for wetland monitoring, including the commonly used method of grey-level thresholding for mapping surface water and highlighting changes in extent, and approaches for polarimetric decompositions to map flooded vegetation and changes from one class of land cover to another. We use the Curvelet-based change detection and the Wishart-Chernoff Distance approaches to show how they substantially improve mapping of flooded vegetation and flagging areas of change, respectively. We recommend that the increasing availability SAR data and the proven ability of these data to map various components of wetlands mean SAR should be considered as a critical component of a wetland monitoring system.


Remote Sensing | 2016

Operational Surface Water Detection and Monitoring Using Radarsat 2

Sandra Bolanos; Doug Stiff; Brian Brisco; Alain Pietroniro

Traditional on-site methods for mapping and monitoring surface water extent are prohibitively expensive at a national scale within Canada. Despite successful cost-sharing programs between the provinces and the federal government, an extensive number of water features within the country remain unmonitored. Particularly difficult to monitor are the potholes in the Canadian Prairie region, most of which are ephemeral in nature and represent a discontinuous flow that influences water pathways, runoff response, flooding and local weather. Radarsat-2 and the Radarsat Constellation Mission (RCM) offer unique capabilities to map the extent of water bodies at a national scale, including unmonitored sites, and leverage the current infrastructure of the Meteorological Service of Canada to monitor water information in remote regions. An analysis of the technical requirements of the Radarsat-2 beam mode, polarization and resolution is presented. A threshold-based procedure to map locations of non-vegetated water bodies after the ice break-up is used and complemented with a texture-based indicator to capture the most homogeneous water areas and automatically delineate their extents. Some strategies to cope with the radiometric artifacts of noise inherent to Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images are also discussed. Our results show that Radarsat-2 Fine mode can capture 88% of the total water area in a fully automated way. This will greatly improve current operational procedures for surface water monitoring information and impact a number of applications including weather forecasting, hydrological modeling, and drought/flood predictions.


Remote Sensing | 2017

Seasonal Change in Wetland Coherence as an Aid to Wetland Monitoring

Brian Brisco; Frank Ahern; Kevin Murnaghan; Lori White; Francis Canisus; Philip Lancaster

Water is an essential natural resource, and information about surface water conditions can support a wide variety of applications, including urban planning, agronomy, hydrology, electrical power generation, disaster relief, ecology and preservation of natural areas. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) is recognized as an important source of data for monitoring surface water, especially under inclement weather conditions, and is used operationally for flood mapping applications. The canopy penetration capability of the microwaves also allows for mapping of flooded vegetation as a result of enhanced backscatter from what is generally believed to be a double-bounce scattering mechanism between the water and emergent vegetation. Recent investigations have shown that, under certain conditions, the SAR response signal from flooded vegetation may remain coherent during repeat satellite over-passes, which can be exploited for interferometric SAR (InSAR) measurements to estimate changes in water levels and water topography. InSAR results also suggest that coherence change detection (CCD) might be applied to wetland monitoring applications. This study examines wetland vegetation characteristics that lead to coherence in RADARSAT-2 InSAR data of an area in eastern Canada with many small wetlands, and determines the annual variation in the coherence of these wetlands using multi-temporal radar data. The results for a three-year period demonstrate that most swamps and marshes maintain coherence throughout the ice-/snow-free time period for the 24-day repeat cycle of RADARSAT-2. However, open water areas without emergent aquatic vegetation generally do not have suitable coherence for CCD or InSAR water level estimation. We have found that wetlands with tree cover exhibit the highest coherence and the least variance; wetlands with herbaceous cover exhibit high coherence, but also high variability of coherence; and wetlands with shrub cover exhibit high coherence, but variability intermediate between treed and herbaceous wetlands. From this knowledge, we have developed a novel image product that combines information about the magnitude of coherence and its variability with radar brightness (backscatter intensity). This product clearly displays the multitude of small wetlands over a wide area. With an interpretation key we have also developed, it is possible to distinguish different wetland types and assess year-to-year changes. In the next few years, satellite SAR systems, such as the European Sentinel and the Canadian RADARSAT Constellation Mission (RCM), will provide rapid revisit capabilities and standard data collection modes, enhancing the operational application of SAR data for assessing wetland conditions and monitoring water levels using InSAR techniques.


Remote Sensing | 2017

Semi-Automated Surface Water Detection with Synthetic Aperture Radar Data: A Wetland Case Study

Amir Behnamian; Sarah N. Banks; Lori White; Brian Brisco; Koreen Millard; Jon Pasher; Zhaohua Chen; Jason Duffe; Laura L. Bourgeau-Chavez; Michael Battaglia

In this study, a new method is proposed for semi-automated surface water detection using synthetic aperture radar data via a combination of radiometric thresholding and image segmentation based on the simple linear iterative clustering superpixel algorithm. Consistent intensity thresholds are selected by assessing the statistical distribution of backscatter values applied to the mean of each superpixel. Higher-order texture measures, such as variance, are used to improve accuracy by removing false positives via an additional thresholding process used to identify the boundaries of water bodies. Results applied to quad-polarized RADARSAT-2 data show that the threshold value for the variance texture measure can be approximated using a constant value for different scenes, and thus it can be used in a fully automated cleanup procedure. Compared to similar approaches, errors of omission and commission are improved with the proposed method. For example, we observed that a threshold-only approach consistently tends to underestimate the extent of water bodies compared to combined thresholding and segmentation, mainly due to the poor performance of the former at the edges of water bodies. The proposed method can be used for monitoring changes in surface water extent within wetlands or other areas, and while presented for use with radar data, it can also be used to detect surface water in optical images.


international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2005

Incorporating a vegetation index into a soil moisture retrieval model

Millie Sikdar; Scott MacIntosh; Ian G. Cumming; Brian Brisco

A flexible method of introducing a SAR vegetation index into the Dubois model for soil moisture retrieval using polarimetric SAR data is introduced. Based on the vegetation sensitivity at each pixel, the vegetation index is incorporated on a pixel by pixel basis using the water cloud model. An approach for minimizing the need for ground measurements, by remotely estimating the parameters required for the vegetation index, is suggested. The proposed model is applied to CV-580 airborne SAR data and the vegetation correction was found to reduce the rms error in the model.


international geoscience and remote sensing symposium | 2014

results from Convair-580 SAR data

Frank Ahern; Brian Brisco; Kevin Murnaghan; Lori White; Shimon Wdowinski; Sang-Hoon Hong; Donald K. Atwood

It is commonly-accepted that the enhanced backscatter from wetlands that consist of many emergent stems over open water (swamps and marshes) is dominated by double-bounce backscatter. Recent observations with fully polarimetric data from Radarsat-2 over the extensive wetlands of the Everglades and numerous small wetlands in Ontario are not consistent with this interpretation of the backscatter physics. In this paper we use several forms of polarimetric analysis and decomposition. All of these indicate that the backscatter from small marshes and swamps in Ontario has polarimetric characteristics normally attributed to the odd-bounce mechanism. A recently-proposed form of Bragg scattering provides a conceptual model to explain these observations. However, detailed electromagnetic backscatter modelling is still needed to provide a new and reliable understanding of backscattering from wetlands with emergent vegetation.


Archive | 2010

PolSAR imaging of wetlands: New insights into backscatter physics

Andreas Schmitt; Brian Brisco; Shannon Kaya; Kevin Murnaghan


Remote Sensing and Hydrology 2010 Symposium | 2010

Polarimetric change detection for wetlands

Shannon Kaya; Brian Brisco; Andrew Cull; Alisa L. Gallant; Walter J. Sadinski; Dean Thompson


EUSAR 2016: 11th European Conference on Synthetic Aperture Radar, Proceedings of | 2016

Canadian SAR remote sensing for the Terrestrial Wetland Global Change Research Network (TWGCRN)

Andreas Schmitt; Anna Wendleder; Kevin Murnaghan; Brian Brisco; Valentin Poncos

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Kevin Murnaghan

Canada Centre for Remote Sensing

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Lori White

Natural Resources Canada

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Shannon Kaya

Natural Resources Canada

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Andrew Cull

Natural Resources Canada

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Heather McNairn

Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada

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Ian G. Cumming

University of British Columbia

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