2017
DOI: 10.1590/2318-0331.011716094
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Temperature Surface of Guaíba Lake, RS, from time series of MODIS images

Abstract: The Guaíba lake is located in an area of complex weather variation and is influenced by many atmospheric circulation systems, bringing about violent occluded fronts, and, sometimes, intense precipitation. In Rio Grande do Sul, during El Niño, air temperatures and the precipitation index are higher, contrary to La Niña. Moreover, the Guaíba Lake receives water from the Guaíba's Hydrographical Region, which corresponds to 1/3 of Rio Grande do Sul State, and is thus an important water body to the metropolitan reg… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Landsat 7 ETM+ was chosen over other Landsat sensors because it has a time series that covers the entire period of the measured data, providing more matching dates of observed temperatures and satellite images, whereas the Landsat 5 mission ended in 2011, and Landsat 8 OLI was launched in 2013, resulting in fewer suitable images from these two sensors. In the case of MODIS, both MOD11 and MOD28, which have been used in previous studies of LSWT (e.g., References [8,10,16,23,41,42]), are available for Lake Mangueira, and are described in the following sections.…”
Section: Study Area and Field Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Landsat 7 ETM+ was chosen over other Landsat sensors because it has a time series that covers the entire period of the measured data, providing more matching dates of observed temperatures and satellite images, whereas the Landsat 5 mission ended in 2011, and Landsat 8 OLI was launched in 2013, resulting in fewer suitable images from these two sensors. In the case of MODIS, both MOD11 and MOD28, which have been used in previous studies of LSWT (e.g., References [8,10,16,23,41,42]), are available for Lake Mangueira, and are described in the following sections.…”
Section: Study Area and Field Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Data from satellite sensors may provide better information on LSWT variability than conventional field monitoring, since most modern sensors have improved capabilities with respect to spectral (e.g., spectral range of the thermal infrared), radiometric, temporal, and spatial resolutions [5,7]. Although satellite-derived water temperature is a description of the LSWT only in the top layer (i.e., approximately the upper 100 µm, called "skin temperature"), it may provide important information about the patterns of water-temperature variations in lakes, and has been used in many studies, such as analysis of temperature patterns and heat budget [8,9], spatial distribution of water-quality variables [4], evaporation estimation [10], LSWT spatial gradients [6,[11][12][13], LSWT temporal-variation patterns [14,15], and the assessment of the impact of El Niño/La Niña events [16] and climate change [3,17,18] on lakes.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Other non-optically active parameters can also be inferred indirectly through their relationship with the optically active ones: total phosphorous (TP) (XIONG et al, 2019), total nitrogen (TN) (LIU et al, 2015), pH, chemical oxygen demand (COD) and dissolved oxygen (DO) (WANG et al, 2012;WANG et al, 2014;PU et al, 2019). Time series of satellite images have also been used to monitor surface water temperature (ALCÂNTARA et al, 2011;CURTARELLI et al, 2014;LUZ;ROCHA, 2017), an important parameter not only for WQ but also as a means to monitor climatic changes (LI et al, 2017).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%