One morning in 2008, research scientist Cathleen Jones of NASA's Jet
Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, Calif., was flying over the San
Andreas fault near San Francisco, testing a new radar instrument built
at JPL. As the plane banked to make a turn, she looked down to see the
Sacramento River delta, a patchwork of low-lying lands crisscrossed by
levees.
Jones was using an instrument that can measure tiny movements of the
ground on the scale of less than half an inch (less than a centimeter).
It's called the Uninhabited Aerial Vehicle Synthetic Aperture Radar
(UAVSAR).
“It struck me that this new instrument might be perfect for
monitoring movement of levees,” said Jones. Checking the scientific
literature, she found that nothing like that had been attempted before
in the delta. She reported her idea to water managers at the California
Department of Water Resources (DWR). She didn't know it, but she was at
the beginning of a long-lived initiative to refine NASA technology for
use in safeguarding the delta levees.
In the Sacramento River delta north of San Francisco Bay, islands,
agricultural lands and communities below sea level are protected from
surrounding water channels by more than 1,100 miles (1,800 kilometers)
of dirt levees, many of which date back to the California Gold Rush.
About two-thirds of all Californians and more than 4 million acres of
irrigated farmland rely on the delta for water.
If a levee gives way, the results can be disastrous. A single 2004
levee failure created $90 million of damage and threatened the water
supply to Southern California. However, the first warning that a levee
is developing a structural problem can be a tiny soil deformation -- too
small to be noticed by a visual inspection.
Remote sensing is a clear solution. The DWR managers had tried other
remote sensing methods such as lidar, without complete satisfaction.
They were immediately interested in the possibilities of UAVSAR. Joel
Dudas, a senior water resources engineer with the DWR, said, "UAVSAR has
the highest potential for giving us a very precise measurement at a
scale that we didn't know was possible."
Supported by NASA's Applied Sciences Program, JPL and the DWR
established a partnership in 2009 to begin a research project testing
how UAVSAR technology could be applied for monitoring the delta levees.
Since then, Jones and UAVSAR have flown a mission over the delta on
NASA’s C-20A scientific research aircraft every four to eight weeks.
Each mission flies along nine overlapping flight lines that were
designed to observe every levee in the 700-square-mile (1,800-square
kilometer) delta from at least three directions in about three hours.
Like all radars, UAVSAR shoots pulses of microwaves at the ground and
records the signals that bounce back. By comparing the data from
consecutive flights, Jones can measure the rate of upward or downward
soil movement in the intervening time. The instrument is specifically
designed to ignore larger-scale movements (such as airplane motion) and
record tiny variations that other instruments cannot identify. The team
has also developed a model to support the data processing. The model
incorporates land use, soil type and other factors that affect
subsidence rates, allowing researchers to put the data in a context that
can help water resource managers find better ways to manage the delta.
From the first year of operation, the research flights have proved
that UAVSAR can locate areas of concern. That year, it detected a
damaged levee that had been rammed by a ship. More recently, it spotted
an area behind a levee where land was subsiding a few inches a year --
fast, but not observable by eye. The DWR added soil and continues to
monitor the area.
Dudas is sold on the potential of UAVSAR monitoring to save time and
money. He foresees an even more critical use if the program becomes a
regular part of DWR operations -- a use that he hasn't had a chance to
test because of the ongoing drought. "During high water we drive the
levees, watching for leaks, but if there's a lot of vegetation or it's
dark, we may not be able to see them. If we could fly this instrument
during a flood, it would allow us to direct our emergency vehicles where
they need to go.
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