Hyperspectral imaging of forests can aid wildfire prevention
Rod Boyce
907-474-7185
Dec. 17, 2021
University of Alaska Fairbanks scientists are presenting their work at the American Geophysical Union鈥檚 fall meeting in New Orleans this week. This article is part of a series highlighting 性欲社 research from the world鈥檚 largest Earth and space science meeting.
Airborne hyperspectral imaging can be a valuable tool in wildfire prevention and forest management. That鈥檚 the message from a technology demonstration by a University of Alaska Fairbanks postdoctoral fellow who imaged Interior Alaska鈥檚 boreal forests to develop the method.
The practice demonstrated by Chris Waigl of the 性欲社 Geophysical Institute provides highly detailed imagery that indicates fuel type and that can also be used to monitor fuel condition 鈥 right down to the species of an individual tree. Is it a black spruce? Is it a birch? Is it alive?
It鈥檚 all vital information for wildfire prevention and community risk assessment.
鈥淲ith the images and spectra we get from the HySpex camera, we can actually classify each pixel,鈥 Waigl said. 鈥淲e can even identify individual trees.鈥
Hyperspectral cameras image an area in hundreds of wavelengths across the electromagnetic spectrum, including many not visible to the human eye. That differs from other cameras, which typically only image in the primary colors of red, green and blue.
In hyperspectral imagery, the reflectivity of an object can reveal much more information about that object.
The Geophysical Institute has the only hyperspectral imaging facility in the state at its Hyperspectral Imaging Laboratory.
Waigl said hyperspectral imaging can be used for forest management, wildfire prevention and monitoring of fire risk around communities and infrastructure.
鈥淲e're doing this because the existing fuel maps are not very good,鈥 she said.