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The discrimination between crude-oil spills and monomolecular sea slicks by an airborne lidarAirborne lidar measurements were performed over a deployed monomolecular oleyl alcohol surface film ('slick'), the physicochemical characteristics of which are known to be similar to biogenic organic compounds secreted by plankton and fish, and adjacent 'clean' sea surfaces in the North Sea. In the presence of the slick, the suppression of the Raman backscatter at 381 nm and of two spectral bands indicative of water column fluorescent organic material at 414 and 482 nm were observed. This effect is explained by two possible mechanisms giving rise to a modification of the transmission or coupling of the laser beam into the water column: (1) the damping of capillary and short gravity water waves by the oleyl alcohol slick, and (2) the modification of the uppermost water layer by the oleyl alcohol film. The results obtained in the presence of a slick are compared with data measured over a Murban crude-oil spill with the same lidar system off the coast of the U.S.A. The consequences of the lidar-monomolecular film experiments with regard to the remote detection of crude-oil spills and oil-thickness measurements with an airborne laser fluorosensing system will be discussed.
Document ID
19860040036
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Huehnerfuss, H.
(Hamburg, Universitaet Germany)
Garrett, W. D.
(U.S. Navy, Naval Research Laboratory, Washington DC, United States)
Hoge, F. E.
(NASA Wallops Flight Center Wallops Island, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 12, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1986
Publication Information
Publication: International Journal of Remote Sensing
Volume: 7
ISSN: 0143-1161
Subject Category
Oceanography
Accession Number
86A24774
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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