Skip to main content

Cutting-edge satellite tracks lake water levels in Ohio River Basin

By Peter Fitzgibbon - 18th December 2024 - 11:53

Researchers have a new tool for measuring water levels not only in this area, which is home to more than 25 million people, but in other watersheds around the world as well.

Ohio River

The Ohio River Basin stretches from Pennsylvania to Illinois and contains a system of reservoirs, lakes, and rivers that drains an area almost as large as France. Researchers with the SWOT (Surface Water and Ocean Topography) mission, a collaboration between NASA and the French space agency CNES (Centre National d'Études Spatiales), now have a new tool for measuring water levels.

Since early 2023, SWOT has been measuring the height of nearly all water on Earth's surface—including oceans, lakes, reservoirs, and rivers—covering nearly the entire globe at least once every 21 days. The SWOT satellite also measures the horizontal extent of water in freshwater bodies. Earlier this year, the mission started making validated data publicly available.

SWOT satellite 2
Launched in December 2022, SWOT is the first satellite mission to observe nearly all water on the planet’s surface.. It is helping researchers understand how much water flows into and out of Earth’s freshwater bodies and provide insight into the ocean’s role in climate change. Image NASA

"Having these two perspectives—water extent and levels—at the same time, along with detailed, frequent coverage over large areas, is unprecedented," said Jida Wang, a hydrologist at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign and a member of the SWOT science team. "This is a groundbreaking, exciting aspect of SWOT."

Researchers can use the mission's data on water level and extent to calculate how the amount of water stored in a lake or reservoir changes over time. This, in turn, can give hydrologists a more precise picture of river discharge—how much water moves through a particular stretch of river.

cutting-edge-satellite
The visualization above uses SWOT data from July 2023 to November 2024 to show the average water level above sea level in lakes and reservoirs in the Ohio River Basin, which drains into the Mississippi River. Yellow indicates values greater than 1,600 feet (500 meters), and dark purple represents water levels less than 330 feet (100 meters). Comparing how such levels change can help hydrologists measure water availability over time in a local area or across a watershed. Credit: NASA Earth Observatory

Complementing a patchwork of data

Historically, estimating freshwater availability for communities within a river basin has been challenging. Researchers gather information from gauges installed at certain lakes and reservoirs, from airborne surveys, and from other satellites that look at either water level or extent. But for ground-based and airborne instruments, the coverage can be limited in space and time. Hydrologists can piece together some of what they need from different satellites, but the data may or may not have been taken at the same time, or the researchers might still need to augment the information with measurements from ground-based sensors.

Even then, calculating freshwater availability can be complicated. Much of the work relies on computer models.

"Traditional water models often don't work very well in highly regulated basins like the Ohio because they have trouble representing the unpredictable behavior of dam operations," said George Allen, a freshwater researcher at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg and a member of the SWOT science team.

Many river basins in the United States include dams and reservoirs managed by a patchwork of entities. While the people who manage a reservoir may know how their section of water behaves, planning for water availability down the entire length of a river can be a challenge. Since SWOT looks at both rivers and lakes, its data can help provide a more unified view.

SWOT screen
Agencies such as the US National Weather Service are using SWOT data to improve their weather projections and models

"The data lets water managers really know what other people in these freshwater systems are doing," said SWOT science team member Colin Gleason, a hydrologist at the University of Massachusetts Amherst.

While SWOT researchers are excited about the possibilities that the data is opening, there is still much to be done. The satellite's high-resolution view of water levels and extent means there is a vast ocean of data that researchers must wade through, and it will take some time to process and analyze the measurements.

Story Source: NASA

Subscribe to our newsletter

Stay updated on the latest technology, innovation product arrivals and exciting offers to your inbox.

Newsletter