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8 June 2011Crude oil, petroleum product, and water discrimination on terrestrial substrates with airborne imaging spectroscopy
The Deepwater Horizon explosion and subsequent sinking produced the largest oil spill in U.S. history. One of
the most prominent portions of the response is mapping the extent to which oil has reached thousands of miles
of shoreline. The most common method of detecting oil remains visual spotting from airframes, supplemented
by panchromatic / multispectral aerial photography and satellite imagery. While this imagery provides a
synoptic view, it is often ambiguous in its ability to discriminate water from hydrocarbon materials.
By employing spectral libraries for material identification and discrimination, imaging spectroscopy
supplements traditional imaging techniques by providing specific criteria for more accurate petroleum detection
and discrimination from water on terrestrial backgrounds. This paper applies a new hydrocarbon-substrate
spectral library to SpecTIR HST-3 airborne imaging spectroscopy data from the Hurricane Katrina disaster in
2005. Using common material identification algorithms, this preliminary analysis demonstrates the
applicability and limitations of hyperspectral data to petroleum/water discrimination in certain conditions. The
current work is also the first application of the petroleum-substrate library to imaging spectroscopy data and
shows potential for monitoring long term impacts of Deepwater Horizon.
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C. Scott Allen, Mark P. S. Krekeler, "Crude oil, petroleum product, and water discrimination on terrestrial substrates with airborne imaging spectroscopy," Proc. SPIE 8040, Active and Passive Signatures II, 80400L (8 June 2011); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.884418