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Im, Jungho
Intelligent Remote sensing and geospatial Information Science Lab.
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Detection of Forest Fire Damage from Sentinel-1 SAR Data through the Synergistic Use of Principal Component Analysis and K-means Clustering [Sentinel-1 SAR K-means Clustering]

Alternative Title
Sentinel-1 SAR 영상을 이용한 주성분분석 및 K-means Clustering 기반 산불 탐지
Author(s)
Lee, JaeseKim, WoohyeokIm, JunghoKwon, ChunguenKim, Sungyong
Issued Date
2021-10
DOI
10.7780/kjrs.2021.37.5.3.4
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/55345
Citation
Korean Journal of Remote Sensing, v.37, no.5, pp.1373 - 1387
Abstract
Forest fire poses a significant threat to the environment and society, affecting carbon cycle and surface energy balance, and resulting in socioeconomic losses. Widely used multi-spectral satellite image-based approaches for burned area detection have a problem in that they do not work under cloudy conditions. Therefore, in this study, Sentinel-1 Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data from Europe Space Agency, which can be collected in all weather conditions, were used to identify forest fire damaged area based on a series of processes including Principal Component Analysis (PCA) and K-means clustering. Four forest fire cases, which occurred in Gangneung·Donghae and Goseong·Sokcho in Gangwon-do of South Korea and two areas in North Korea on April 4, 2019, were examined. The estimated burned areas were evaluated using fire reference data provided by the National Institute of Forest Science (NIFOS) for two forest fire cases in South Korea, and differenced normalized burn ratio (dNBR) for all four cases. The average accuracy using the NIFOS reference data was 86% for the Gangneung·Donghae and Goseong·Sokcho fires. Evaluation using dNBR showed an average accuracy of 84% for all four forest fire cases. It was also confirmed that the stronger the burned intensity, the higher detection the accuracy, and vice versa. Given the advantage of SAR remote sensing, the proposed statistical processing and K-means clustering-based approach can be used to quickly identify forest fire damaged area across the Korean Peninsula, where a cloud cover rate is high and small-scale forest fires frequently occur.
Publisher
대한원격탐사학회
ISSN
1225-6161
Keyword (Author)
SARPCAK-means clusteringForest fire damaged areadNBR

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