2005
DOI: 10.1016/j.rse.2004.11.015
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Oil spill detection by satellite remote sensing

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Cited by 892 publications
(507 citation statements)
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“…These may be low wind areas, shear zones, grease ice, upwelling, rain cells, biological films (surfactants), algae blooms or the internal and atmospheric gravity waves etc. The main problem in the identification of oil pollution is to discriminate these natural effects from the oil pollution (Brekke and Solberg 2005). For this purpose, the oil slick properties (shape, size, location relative to infrastructure, contrast, texture, form of the boundaries of slicks) can be used as well, as meteorological and oceanographic information or satellite data in the visible and infrared ranges .…”
Section: Envisat (Asar)mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…These may be low wind areas, shear zones, grease ice, upwelling, rain cells, biological films (surfactants), algae blooms or the internal and atmospheric gravity waves etc. The main problem in the identification of oil pollution is to discriminate these natural effects from the oil pollution (Brekke and Solberg 2005). For this purpose, the oil slick properties (shape, size, location relative to infrastructure, contrast, texture, form of the boundaries of slicks) can be used as well, as meteorological and oceanographic information or satellite data in the visible and infrared ranges .…”
Section: Envisat (Asar)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Oil and oil products come into the sea as a result of small accidents, routine manufacturing operations, illegal discharges from ships ballast and bilge water, fishing activity (fishery waste), as a result of washing tanks, river runoff, accidents involving oil tankers, or during the oil offshore exploration and production (Bernem and Lübbe 1997;Alpers 2002, Brekke andSolberg 2005). It should be noted that crude oil intrusion into the water is quite rare, as it only happens because of accidents on oil rigs and tankers, leaking pipelines as well natural seeps.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Yearly, 48 % of oil contamination in the oceans is due to fuels and 29 % by crude oil (Brekke and Solberg 2005). Annually, approximately 35 million barrels petroleum has been transport across the world which is an important source of oil contamination (Zaki et al 2015).…”
Section: Bioremediation Of Oilmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…SAR imagery has proved very effective for observing, measuring and quantifying oceanographic phenomena such as fronts, waves, eddies, winds, storms, oil spills, algae blooms, currents, and boundary layer rolls [1,2]. The ability of SAR sensors in retrieving data in almost all weather conditions, independently of sunlight surface, is extremely important for oceanographic studies.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%