Abstract
<p>For the past 20 years, the ASTER and MODIS instruments on Terra have acquired thermal infrared (TIR) data of the world’s volcanoes. These observations have improved our knowledge of long-term volcanic behavior, eruption monitoring, and post-eruption change. MODIS acquires images twice per day (later doubling this after the launch of Aqua) with 1 km TIR and mid-IR resolution. The volcano data from MODIS were later organized into global automated observation programs such as MODVOLC (USA) and later MIROVA (IT). These systems continually detect and track the amount of emitted energy at each active volcano, resulting in vast databases over time that are critically important for ongoing eruptions. Unlike MODIS, ASTER is scheduled and acquires TIR data at 90 m spatial resolution nominally every 5 – 16 days depending on the latitude. This can be improved to hours with proper scheduling and orbital dependencies using its expedited data system. For the past 15 years, an ASTER program called the Urgent Request Protocol (URP) has combined the rapid detection capability of MODIS with the high resolution expedited observations of ASTER in a sensor-web approach. The URP is operated by the University of Pittsburgh in conjunction with (and the support of) the Universities of Alaska, Hawaii, Turin (IT), Clermont Auvergne (FR), and Bristol (UK) as well as the USGS, the LP DAAC and the ASTER science team. The data are used for: operational response to new eruptions; determining thermal trends months prior to an eruption; inferring the emplacement of new lava lobes; and mapping the constituents of volcanic plumes, to name a few. This ASTER TIR archive of volcanic data is now being mined to provide statistics for future TIR orbital concepts being considered by NASA. As TIR instruments get smaller and more numerous with the use of uncooled detectors, they will become CubeSat compatible and could operate in a multi-platform, sensor-web architecture. This would improve response times to volcanic crises and enable new measurements such as the global inventory of volcanic degassing, thermal precursory trends at every volcano, and active flow temperatures at the minute timescale required for predictive flow and hazard assessment models. The combined spatial, spectral and temporal resolutions of ASTER and MODIS enabled a new multi-platform, multi-scale approach to volcanic remote sensing, a model which could be greatly improved depending on future instrument/mission selections.</p>
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