1 March 2010 Middle-term metropolitan water availability index assessment based on synergistic potentials of multi-sensor data
Ni-Bin Chang, Y. Jeffrey Yang, Ammarin Daranpob
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The impact of recent drought and water pollution episodes results in an acute need to project future water availability to assist water managers in water utility infrastructure management within many metropolitan regions. Separate drought and water quality indices previously developed might not be sufficient for the purpose of such an assessment. This paper describes the development of the "Metropolitan Water Availability Index (MWAI)" and its potential applications in assessing the middle-term water availability at the watershed scale in a fast growing metropolitan region - the Manatee County near Tampa Bay, Florida, U.S.A. The MWAI framework is based on a statistical approach that seeks to reflect the continuous spatial and temporal variations of both water quantity and quality using a simple numerical index. Such a trend analysis will surely result in the final MWAI values for regional water management systems within a specified range. By using remote sensing technologies and data processing techniques, continuous monitoring of spatial and temporal distributions of key water availability variables, such as evapotranspiration (ET) and precipitation, is made achievable. These remote sensing technologies can be ground-based (e.g., radar estimates of rainfall), or based on remote sensing data gathered by aircraft or satellites. Using a middle term historical record, the MWAI was applied to the Manatee County water supplies. The findings clearly indicate that only eight out of twelve months in 2008 had positive MWAI values during the year. (Partial Abstract).
Ni-Bin Chang, Y. Jeffrey Yang, and Ammarin Daranpob "Middle-term metropolitan water availability index assessment based on synergistic potentials of multi-sensor data," Journal of Applied Remote Sensing 4(1), 043519 (1 March 2010). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.3386582
Published: 1 March 2010
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CITATIONS
Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Water

Remote sensing

Soil science

Satellites

MODIS

Earth observing sensors

Radar

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