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Dive into the research topics where Javier García-Pintado is active.

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Featured researches published by Javier García-Pintado.


International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation | 2014

Detection of flooded urban areas in high resolution Synthetic Aperture Radar images using double scattering

David C. Mason; Laura Giustarini; Javier García-Pintado; Hannah L. Cloke

Abstract Flooding is a particular hazard in urban areas worldwide due to the increased risks to life and property in these regions. Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) sensors are often used to image flooding because of their all-weather day–night capability, and now possess sufficient resolution to image urban flooding. The flood extents extracted from the images may be used for flood relief management and improved urban flood inundation modelling. A difficulty with using SAR for urban flood detection is that, due to its side-looking nature, substantial areas of urban ground surface may not be visible to the SAR due to radar layover and shadow caused by buildings and taller vegetation. This paper investigates whether urban flooding can be detected in layover regions (where flooding may not normally be apparent) using double scattering between the (possibly flooded) ground surface and the walls of adjacent buildings. The method estimates double scattering strengths using a SAR image in conjunction with a high resolution LiDAR (Light Detection and Ranging) height map of the urban area. A SAR simulator is applied to the LiDAR data to generate maps of layover and shadow, and estimate the positions of double scattering curves in the SAR image. Observations of double scattering strengths were compared to the predictions from an electromagnetic scattering model, for both the case of a single image containing flooding, and a change detection case in which the flooded image was compared to an un-flooded image of the same area acquired with the same radar parameters. The method proved successful in detecting double scattering due to flooding in the single-image case, for which flooded double scattering curves were detected with 100% classification accuracy (albeit using a small sample set) and un-flooded curves with 91% classification accuracy. The same measures of success were achieved using change detection between flooded and un-flooded images. Depending on the particular flooding situation, the method could lead to improved detection of flooding in urban areas.


Sensors | 2012

A Real-Time Measurement System for Long-Life Flood Monitoring and Warning Applications

Rafael Marin-Perez; Javier García-Pintado; Antonio Gómez

A flood warning system incorporates telemetered rainfall and flow/water level data measured at various locations in the catchment area. Real-time accurate data collection is required for this use, and sensor networks improve the system capabilities. However, existing sensor nodes struggle to satisfy the hydrological requirements in terms of autonomy, sensor hardware compatibility, reliability and long-range communication. We describe the design and development of a real-time measurement system for flood monitoring, and its deployment in a flash-flood prone 650 km2 semiarid watershed in Southern Spain. A developed low-power and long-range communication device, so-called DatalogV1, provides automatic data gathering and reliable transmission. DatalogV1 incorporates self-monitoring for adapting measurement schedules for consumption management and to capture events of interest. Two tests are used to assess the success of the development. The results show an autonomous and robust monitoring system for long-term collection of water level data in many sparse locations during flood events.


Hydrological Sciences Journal-journal Des Sciences Hydrologiques | 2008

Investigating hydrological regimes and processes in a set of catchments with temporary waters in Mediterranean Europe

Francesc Gallart; Yorgos Amaxidis; Paolo Botti; Giuseppe Canè; V. Castillo; Pippa J. Chapman; Jochen Froebrich; Javier García-Pintado; J. Latron; Pilar Llorens; Antonio Lo Porto; Manuela Morais; Ramiro Neves; P. Ninov; Jean-Louis Perrin; Irina Ribarova; Nikolaos Skoulikidis; Marie-George Tournoud

Abstract Seven catchments of diverse size in Mediterranean Europe were investigated in order to understand the main aspects of their hydrological functioning. The methods included the analysis of daily and monthly precipitation, monthly potential evapotranspiration rates, flow duration curves, rainfall—runoff relationships and catchment internal data for the smaller and more instrumented catchments. The results showed that the catchments were less “dry” than initially considered. Only one of them was really semi-arid throughout the year. All the remaining catchments showed wet seasons when precipitation exceeded potential evapotrans-piration, allowing aquifer recharge, “wet” runoff generation mechanisms and relevant baseflow contribution. Nevertheless, local infiltration excess (Hortonian) overland flow was inferred during summer storms in some catchments and urban overland flow in some others. The roles of karstic groundwater, human disturbance and low winter temperatures were identified as having an important impact on the hydrological regime in some of the catchments.


International Journal of Applied Earth Observation and Geoinformation | 2016

Evidence of a topographic signal in surface soil moisture derived from ENVISAT ASAR wide swath data

David C. Mason; Javier García-Pintado; Hannah L. Cloke; Sarah L. Dance

The susceptibility of a catchment to flooding is affected by its soil moisture prior to an extreme rainfall event. While soil moisture is routinely observed by satellite instruments, results from previous work on the assimilation of remotely sensed soil moisture into hydrologic models have been mixed. This may have been due in part to the low spatial resolution of the observations used. In this study, the remote sensing aspects of a project attempting to improve flow predictions from a distributed hydrologic model by assimilating soil moisture measurements are described. Advanced Synthetic Aperture Radar (ASAR) Wide Swath data were used to measure soil moisture as, unlike low resolution microwave data, they have sufficient resolution to allow soil moisture variations due to local topography to be detected, which may help to take into account the spatial heterogeneity of hydrological processes. Surface soil moisture content (SSMC) was measured over the catchments of the Severn and Avon rivers in the South West UK. To reduce the influence of vegetation, measurements were made only over homogeneous pixels of improved grassland determined from a land cover map. Radar backscatter was corrected for terrain variations and normalized to a common incidence angle. SSMC was calculated using change detection. To search for evidence of a topographic signal, the mean SSMC from improved grassland pixels on low slopes near rivers was compared to that on higher slopes. When the mean SSMC on low slopes was 30–90%, the higher slopes were slightly drier than the low slopes. The effect was reversed for lower SSMC values. It was also more pronounced during a drying event. These findings contribute to the scant information in the literature on the use of high resolution SAR soil moisture measurement to improve hydrologic models.


Frontiers of Earth Science in China | 2015

The potential of flood forecasting using a variable-resolution global Digital Terrain Model and flood extents from Synthetic Aperture Radar images

David C. Mason; Javier García-Pintado; Hannah L. Cloke; Sarah L. Dance

A basic data requirement of a river flood inundation model is a Digital Terrain Model (DTM) of the reach being studied. The scale at which modeling is required determines the accuracy required of the DTM. For modeling floods in urban areas, a high resolution DTM such as that produced by airborne LiDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) is most useful, and large parts of many developed countries have now been mapped using LiDAR. In remoter areas, it is possible to model flooding on a larger scale using a lower resolution DTM, and in the near future the DTM of choice is likely to be that derived from the TanDEM-X Digital Elevation Model (DEM). A variable-resolution global DTM obtained by combining existing high and low resolution data sets would be useful for modeling flood water dynamics globally, at high resolution wherever possible and at lower resolution over larger rivers in remote areas. A further important data resource used in flood modeling is the flood extent, commonly derived from Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) images. Flood extents become more useful if they are intersected with the DTM, when water level observations (WLOs) at the flood boundary can be estimated at various points along the river reach. To illustrate the utility of such a global DTM, two examples of recent research involving WLOs at opposite ends of the spatial scale are discussed. The first requires high resolution spatial data, and involves the assimilation of WLOs from a real sequence of high resolution SAR images into a flood model to update the model state with observations over time, and to estimate river discharge and model parameters, including river bathymetry and friction. The results indicate the feasibility of such an Earth Observation-based flood forecasting system. The second example is at a larger scale, and uses SAR-derived WLOs to improve the lower-resolution TanDEM-X DEM in the area covered by the flood extents. The resulting reduction in random height error is significant.


Environmental Modelling and Software | 2018

Observation impact, domain length and parameter estimation in data assimilation for flood forecasting

Elizabeth S. Cooper; Sarah L. Dance; Javier García-Pintado; Nancy Nichols; Polly J. Smith

Abstract Accurate inundation forecasting provides vital information about the behaviour of fluvial flood water. Using data assimilation with an Ensemble Transform Kalman Filter we combine forecasts from a numerical hydrodynamic model with synthetic observations of water levels. We show that reinitialising the model with corrected water levels can cause an initialisation shock and demonstrate a simple novel solution. In agreement with others, we find that although assimilation can accurately correct water levels at observation times, the corrected forecast quickly relaxes to the open loop forecast. Our new work shows that the time taken for the forecast to relax to the open loop case depends on domain length; observation impact is longer-lived in a longer domain. We demonstrate that jointly correcting the channel friction parameter as well as water levels greatly improves the forecast. We also show that updating the value of the channel friction parameter can compensate for bias in inflow.


Science of The Total Environment | 2007

Anthropogenic nutrient sources and loads from a Mediterranean catchment into a coastal lagoon: Mar Menor, Spain

Javier García-Pintado; M. Martínez-Mena; Gonzalo G. Barberá; J. Albaladejo; V. Castillo


Journal of Hydrology | 2013

Scheduling satellite-based SAR acquisition for sequential assimilation of water level observations into flood modelling

Javier García-Pintado; Jeffrey C. Neal; David C. Mason; Sarah L. Dance; Paul D. Bates


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2012

Automatic near real-time selection of flood water levels from high resolution Synthetic Aperture Radar images for assimilation into hydraulic models: A case study

David C. Mason; Gj-P Schumann; Jeffrey C. Neal; Javier García-Pintado; Paul D. Bates


Journal of Hydrology | 2015

Satellite-supported flood forecasting in river networks: a real case study

Javier García-Pintado; David C. Mason; Sarah L. Dance; Hannah L. Cloke; Jeffrey C. Neal; Jim E Freer; Paul D. Bates

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V. Castillo

Spanish National Research Council

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Gonzalo G. Barberá

Spanish National Research Council

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Francesc Gallart

Spanish National Research Council

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