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Day 1: Wednesday 14 January 2015

Time Speaker Title Affiliation
08h30 Registration, Tea/ Coffee    
09h00 - 09h15 Augustus Vogel* Opening Address of MariSAR 2015 Office of Naval Research Global (ONRG)
09h15 - 10h15 Clayton Stewart* (Keynote Speaker)  Space-based SAR for maritime domain awareness University College London (UCL)
  This paper argues that commercial space based synthetic aperture radar (SAR) sensors can make a significant contribution to maritime domain awareness (MDA). First the concept of MDA is defined and the motivation for it is addressed. The currently used automatic identification system (AIS) for ships is discussed at some length, and its limitations are discussed. The use of commercial space based SAR sensors for MDA is discussed in some detail. Some of the available commercial SAR satellite systems are considered in some detail. The potential of using space based EO/IR for MDA is considered as well, and the ONR Global EO MDA experiment is discussed. The conclusion is that space based SAR has a role to play in MDA

 

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10h20 - 10h50 Mid-morning Tea    
10h50 - 11h15 Marjolaine Krug Ocean wind, waves and current observations from SAR in South Africa Council for Science and Industrial Research (CSIR), Pretoria, South Africa
  At present, very few observations of wind, waves and surface currents are available to the marine community for the coastal regions of South Africa. Satellite remote sensing observations from Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) can provide routine information on wave, current and winds and are used widely over the global ocean to monitor and study ocean circulation. SAR observations have remained largely unexploited in South Africa due to a lack of expertise. Here we review some of the recent research efforts in South Africa for monitoring our oceans using satellite-based SAR.

 

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11h15 - 11h40 Lizwe Mdakane Bilge dump detection from SAR imagery using local binary patterns Council for Science and Industrial Research (CSIR), Pretoria, South Africa
  The detection is often done by discriminating the pollutants from the surrounding sea using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) imagery. SAR is an important tool for ocean surveillance and mapping because it is one of the few sensors that can detect anomalies during the day and night through the clouds for large areas. Ocean pollutants such as bildge waste have damping effects on radar return energy, producing “darker” areas compare to the sea. This phenomena allows the detection and discrimination of sea pollutants (dark areas) from the sea cluster. Proper feature representation of the dark targets (areas containing a high probability of a bilge dump event) from the sea clutter is a crucial step as it improves performance in the discrimination of pollutants from look-alikes (dark areas formed by natural causes). A full detection system usually involves a prescreening and discrimination phase. Prescreening is the isolation of dark targets from the sea clutter. The isolated dark target from prescreening phase are processed further for separating bilge dumps from any look-alikes (this is known as the discrimination phase). The latter is highly sensitive to the performance of the prescreening phase. We investigate the use of Local Ternary Patterns derived from the popular Local Binary Patterns (LBPs) in the discrimination of possible bilge dumps from the sea cluster.

 

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12h15-13h15 Lunch    
13h15-14h15 Marco Martorella* (Keynote Speaker) Spaceborne ISAR imaging for maritime surveillance University of Pisa, Italy
  Maritime domain awareness is a challenge today because of the complexity of suh scenario and the increasing maritime traffic and number of threats. Many communication systems and sensors are employed to obtain a detailed picture of the maritime scenario at any time and in any weather condition. Because of this, radar plays a very important role in detecting, tracking and imaging targets in an area of interest. Many platforms are then used to make radar effective in a several scenarios. In particular, when large areas have to be covered, space borne radar systems are employed to obtain high resolution images in all-weather/all-time conditions. This talk will focus on spaceborne radar and will address the problem of detecting and imaging moving targets in scenarios of maritime surveillance. Specifically, the issue of focusing moving targets under complex motions (pitch, roll and yaw) will be considered and a solution based on the use of ISAR processing will be provided and validated on real Cosmo-Skymed data. A number of examples will be given to illustrate the potential of spaceborne ISAR for application of maritime surveillance.

 

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14h15-14h40 Jose da Silva The effect of the North Equatorial Counter Current on the generation and propagation of internal solitary waves near the Amazon river shelf as observed in SAR imagery Department of Geosciences, Environment and Spatial Planning and Centro Interdisciplinar de Investigação Marinha e Ambiental (CIIMAR)
  We present a first account of Internal Solitary Waves (ISWs) on and off the Brazilian Amazon shelf, based on SAR images. The coherence crest lengths can exceed 200 km, are first detected near the southern edge of the North Equatorial Counter Current (NECC) and intensify on the northern edge of the NECC. There is a strong seasonal variability on the ISW spatial structure and propagation directions, as they enter the influence of the NECC. Some on-shelf regions are prone to intense ISW signatures in the SAR, which are believed to be associated with intricate bottom-topography.

 

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14h40-15h05 Jorge Magalhaes Internal solitary waves in the Red Sea: SAR contribution to an unfolding mystery University of Porto, Portugal
  The southern Red Sea is identified as a new hotspot for oceanic internal solitary waves (ISWs). SAR reveals propagation from the deep central Red Sea toward the continental shelf, where they quickly dissipate. Very weak surface tides suggest a non-trivial generation mechanism and three different possible explanations are considered: interfacial tide resonance, local generation mechanism, and locally amplified internal wave beams owing to repeated focusing reflections. Atmospheric ISWs are also briefly discussed as possible look-alikes.

 

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15h15-15h45 Afternoon Tea    
15h45-16h10 Oscar Garcia-Pineda* Fingerprinting oil thickness on SAR Florida State University, USA
  Monitoring oil spills with remote sensing is a well established task. Recently, by combining hyperspectral and microwave satellite images, we have learned that features associated with oil emulsions can be detected with SAR and optical-infrared sensors. In this talk, we present our ongoing work and our latest results, including the development of an algorithm that delineates thick oil signatures in satellite imagery. This technique is validated in a recent field campaign where oil samples were collected.

 

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16h10-16h35 Roland Romeiser* Current measurements by TerraSAR-X and TanDEM-X along-track interferometry Department of Ocean Sciences, Rosenstiehl School of Marine and Atmospheric Science (RSMAS)
  For the first time, an experimental mode of TerraSAR-X permits direct surface current measurements by SAR along-track interferometry (ATI). While the system parameters are not optimal, a number of datasets acquired over river, coastal, and open ocean test sites show the potential of the technique. Inter-satellite ATI data obtained from TanDEM-X, a formation of TerraSAR-X and an identical twin, have been shown to reach a current retrieval accuracy of 0.1 m/s at an effective resolution of about 30 m. We present an overview of recent achievements and an outlook to future developments.

 

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16h35-17h00 William Pichel* Current NOAA operational SAR-derived high-resolution wind products, and plans for utilizing Sentinel-1 National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Centre for Satellite Applications and Research (STAR)
  In May 2013, NOAA began operational production of high-resolution sea surface winds derived from RADARSAT-2 synthetic aperture radar (SAR) imagery. These unique wind products are at a resolution of 500 m and measure winds right up to the coast and in bays and straits, making these products particularly valuable for safety of coastal transportation in regions of rugged coastal topography. Current efforts to further develop this new product include use of imagery from the recently-launched Sentinel-1a satellite; new wind product formats and product distribution methods, and a product archive.

 

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17h00-17h25 Ralph Foster* Sea-level pressure and large-scale PBL coherent structures derived from synthetic aperture radar images of the sea surface under tropical cyclones Applied Physics Laboratory, University of Washington
  This talk summarizes methods for retrieving Sea-level pressure from high-resolution surface wind vectors derived fromsynthetic aperture radar images of the sea surface underneath tropical cyclones. Wind vector retrieval methods use the imprint of O(500 to 3000 m) planetary boundary layer (PBL) roll vortices to establish the surface wind direction. Standard model functions are then used to derive surface wind speeds (and quality flags) from the known radar look geometry. Calibration and validation of wind vectors is generally limited to pointwise comparisons with drop sondes of other wind sources, which are of very difficult to obtain in tropical cyclone conditions. In contrast, surface pressure represents an integral measure of the scene-wind wind vector field. Furthermore, surface pressure measurements in TCs are very robust.Hence, we developed an invertible PBL model that incorporates the unique dynamics of the TC PBL from which we can derive a dynamically-constrained surface pressure pattern from the retrieved wind vectors. The same PBL model can be used to then derive an “SLP-filtered” surface wind vector field. Overall, the SLP-filtered winds are quite close to the highest-quality input wind vectors; however, they are significantly more accurate in regions of lowest-quality input wind vectors. We also investigate ubiquitous O(10 km) wavelength modulations in the surface wind convergence and surface wind stress curl. We hypothesize that they are the surface signature of very large aspect ratio PBL roll vortices and develop a nonlinear, triad wave-wave interaction theory to explain how they might be generated through upscale energy transfer from the “standard” low aspect ratio roll vortices that were used to set the surface wind direction for the wind vector retrievals.

 

 

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17h30 Michael Inggs Closing Remarks Day 1 – Invitation to Icebreaker University of Cape Town (UCT)
18h00 Icebreaker/Get-together (refreshments and finger foods)    

Day 2: Thursday 15 January 2015

Time Speaker Title Affiliation
08h30-09h00 Tea/ Coffee    
09h00 - 09h15 Michael Inggs Introduction to Day 2
University of Cape Town(UCT)

 

 

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09h15 - 10h15 Johnny Johannessen (Keynote Speaker) Imaging radar satellites for coastal and ocean application with focus on the seas around South Africa Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Centre, Bergen, Norway
  A synergetic approach for quantitative analysis of high resolution ocean imaging SAR in combination with other satellite sensors will be presented. This approach clearly demonstrates that sea surface roughness anomalies derived from these different satellite senors are spatially correlated with sharp gradients of the sea surface temperature (SST) field. To quantitatively interpret these correlated observations a direct link between the spatially varying surface roughness field and the surface divergence field is derived.

 

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10h20 - 10h50 Mid-morning Tea    
10h50 - 11h15 Joel Dabrowski Contextual behavioural modelling and classification of vessels in a maritime piracy situation University of Pretoria, South Africa
  A method is developed for modelling and classifying behaviour of maritime vessels in a piracy situation. Prior knowledge is used to construct a probabilistic graphical model of maritime vessel behaviour. This model is a novel variant of a dynamic Bayesian network (DBN), that extends the switching linear dynamic system (SLDS) to accommodate contextual information. A generative model and a classifier model are developed. The purpose of the generative model is to generate simulated data by modelling the behaviour of fishing vessels, transport vessels and pirate vessels in a maritime piracy situation. The vessels move, interact and perform various activities on a predefined map. The data generated by the model may simulate sensor data such as radar data. The model is evaluated by comparing simulation results with 2011 pirate attack reports using a novel methodology. The classifier model classifies maritime vessels into predefined categories according to their behaviour. The classification is performed by inferring the class of a vessel as a fishing, transport or pirate vessel class. The classification method is evaluated by classifying the data generated by the generative model and comparing it to the true classes of the simulated vessels.

 

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11h15 - 11h40 Eric Jürgen Haase* Locating historic oil dumping offshore Namibia using oiled-penguin data and satellite radar imagery Polytechnic of Namibia/Denmark’s Technical University
  Since 2002 biologists monitoring the penguin colonies near Luederitz, Namibia have recorded many episodes of finding oil-covered penguins. A likely cause is the penguins encountered oil slicks at sea from unlawful tank-discharging by ships. The events provide dates and locations to search for any existing historic SAR imagery in an attempt to find the oil slicks which the penguins encountered and get an idea of where the dumping occurred and the areal size of the slicks.Offshore southern Namibia the large Luederitz upwelling cell of the Benguela Current brings cold, nutrient rich waters up to the surface producing a high abundance of biological activity from the base of the food chain such as plankton and algal blooms up to the largest marine animals like large populations of fish, seals and sea birds, including African Penguins. The cold current influences the weather too and foggy days are very common, especially offshore. With the hot Namib Desert coming right up to the coast and polar waters upwelling just offshore the temperature contrast is extreme, fueling coastal winds that frequently peak well over 15 m/s.This environment makes the accurate interpretation of radar imagery challenging amongst upwelling filaments, convergent water fronts, highly variable winds, biogenic oils and there may be sub-sea oil seeps in the region too. There are also many ship wrecks on the sea floor and beach, some vessels quite large. Due to the prevalence of offshore fog using optical imagery such as from MODIS to augment the radar interpretation can not be relied upon. The search for anthropogenic oil slicks here is an ambitious task.The Namibian coastline is uninhabited except for a handful of small communities entirely in the south. There is essentially no regular coastal observation worth mentioning and this makes it the perfect place for illegal oil dumping and according to the penguin data the ships know this. This project is a counter-measure to the oil dumping and hopes to demonstrate the utility of radar observation for environmental protection.The salient theme of this study is to characterize the historic oil spills. Knowing the position of an oil slick tells biologists where the penguins are going in their hunting and migration routes. Physical scientists learn marine circulation patterns by comparing where slicks at sea made landfall or met a penguin from a certain colony. Matching oil slicks with any existing ship position data might also identify culprits. If the possibility of being caught by radar is publicized it might also deter ship captains from practicing illegal oil dumping.

 

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12h15-13h15 Lunch    
13h15-13h40 Willie Nel ISAR imaging of maritime targets Council for Science and Industrial Research (CSIR), Pretoria, South Africa
  Naval radars used for maritime security are becoming more sensitive. As there sensitivity increase however, the number and types of vessels and ‘false’ targets increase and techniques are required to make sense of all the tracks. This presentation will discuss some results on the use and usefulness of Inverse SAR in the maritime domain and discuss some of the challenges and issues, as well as what lies ahead in terms of improving performance. The material is based on outputs from the CSIR research programme in this field of radar target recognition in the maritime.

 

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13h40-14h05 Colin Schwegmann Ship detection methods in South African waters in synthetic aperture radar imagery Council for Science and Industrial Research (CSIR), Pretoria, South Africa
  The latest advances in ship detection methods in SAR imagery over South African waters with a focus on approaches using Image Processing and Pattern Recognition techniques.

 

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14h05-14h30 Giuliana Pallotta* Operational use of space based information for enhancing maritime surveillance capabilities
University of Cape Town(UCT)

 

Click for Part 1

  Sensors on Earth Observation (EO) satellites can enhance maritime surveillance capabilities, especially when treated as part of a larger sensor network and integrated with land and sea-based sensors. Specifically, Earth Observation Synthetic Aperture Radars (EO SAR) can augment the many cooperative, transponder-based sensors with a non-cooperative capability. This means that EO sensors have the potential to detect vessels, which are not reporting their positional information or confirm ship detections. Within this framework, the presentation will discuss the challenges and state of the art solutions for integrating space-based information into surveillance capabilities and will assess the advantages deriving from exploiting historical patterns of life. The proposed methodology can be beneficial in areas with sparse data in order to propagate ship detections along confirmed routes and potentially inform EO SAR acquisition by more accurately predicting the future vessel location.

 

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14h30-14h55 Waldo Kleynhans* Use of Sentinel-1 data for vessel detection in South Africa: Early results Council for Science and Industrial Research (CSIR), Pretoria, South Africa
  This talk will showcase the utility of Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data acquired from the SAR instrument on-board the the recently launched sentinel-1 satellite for the detection of vessels within the South African EEZ. A number of Extra Wide (EW) Swath images were used and vessel detection methods such as standard cell averaging constant false alarm rate (CA-CFAR) were tested for various polarization modes. Early results indicate that the sentinel-1 EW images showed very promising results for vessel detection in the South African EEZ.

 

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15h05-15h35 Afternoon Tea    
15h35-16h35 Mehrdad Soumekh* (Keynote Speaker) SAR moving target detection, geolocation and tracking Dept of Electrical Engineering, State University of New York at Buffalo, Amherst, New York
  In this presentation, we outline analytical and realistic Gotcha-SAR data results on the development and merits of three SAR-MTI algorithms.Our presentation will also include further development and refinement of our geolocation algorithms using the radial-range and angular Doppler subaperture data of a moving target.

 

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16h35-17h00 Bryan Bagnall* Automated oil slick detection methods using SAR imagery Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR)
  It is advantageous environmentally and economically to be able to quickly and accurately detect seaborne oil slicks. A introduction to the problem of automated oil slick detection using Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) satellite imagery is provided. SAR technology is well suited for oil detection because of its ability to penetrate clouds and gather data in the absence of sunlight. The state of the art in automated oil slick detection algorithms is reviewed, with a specific focus on methods for preprocessing, dark area detection, feature extraction, and classification. In order to assist developers of oil slick detection systems, brief descriptions of multiple techniques used to accomplish each of the considered tasks are given.

 

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17h00-17h25 Sparta Cheung* Application of RADAR corner reflectors for the detection of small vessels in synthetic aperture radar Space and Naval Warfare Systems Command (SPAWAR)
  Detection of vessels from space-based Synthetic Aperture RADAR (SAR) data is an important area of research with many applications. Wooden canoes are not easy to detect and track in coastal RADAR or SAR imagery, posing a potential risk to maritime safety and security. We describe a possible solution based on inexpensive, versatile corner reflectors. Canoes were deployed to specific locations off the coast of Ghana at times corresponding to the acquisition of space-based SAR imagery. We present results of the detection of these wooden canoes with corner reflectors in space-based SAR imagery.

 

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17h25 Daniel O’Hagan Closing Remarks Day 2 – Directions to Smuts Hall University of Cape Town (UCT)
18h00 Conference Dinner at Smuts Hall, University of Cape Town    

Day 2: Thursday 15 January 2015

Time Speaker Title Affiliation
08h30-09h00 Tea/ Coffee    
09h00 - 09h15 Michael Inggs Introduction to Day 2
University of Cape Town(UCT)

 

Click for video

09h15 - 10h15 Johnny Johannessen (Keynote Speaker) Imaging radar satellites for coastal and ocean application with focus on the seas around South Africa Nansen Environmental and Remote Sensing Centre, Bergen, Norway
  A synergetic approach for quantitative analysis of high resolution ocean imaging SAR in combination with other satellite sensors will be presented. This approach clearly demonstrates that sea surface roughness anomalies derived from these different satellite senors are spatially correlated with sharp gradients of the sea surface temperature (SST) field. To quantitatively interpret these correlated observations a direct link between the spatially varying surface roughness field and the surface divergence field is derived.

 

Click for video

10h20 - 10h50 Mid-morning Tea    
10h50 - 11h15 Joel Dabrowski Contextual behavioural modelling and classification of vessels in a maritime piracy situation University of Pretoria, South Africa
  A method is developed for modelling and classifying behaviour of maritime vessels in a piracy situation. Prior knowledge is used to construct a probabilistic graphical model of maritime vessel behaviour. This model is a novel variant of a dynamic Bayesian network (DBN), that extends the switching linear dynamic system (SLDS) to accommodate contextual information. A generative model and a classifier model are developed. The purpose of the generative model is to generate simulated data by modelling the behaviour of fishing vessels, transport vessels and pirate vessels in a maritime piracy situation. The vessels move, interact and perform various activities on a predefined map. The data generated by the model may simulate sensor data such as radar data. The model is evaluated by comparing simulation results with 2011 pirate attack reports using a novel methodology. The classifier model classifies maritime vessels into predefined categories according to their behaviour. The classification is performed by inferring the class of a vessel as a fishing, transport or pirate vessel class. The classification method is evaluated by classifying the data generated by the generative model and comparing it to the true classes of the simulated vessels.

 

Click for video

11h15 - 11h40 Eric Jürgen Haase* Locating historic oil dumping offshore Namibia using oiled-penguin data and satellite radar imagery Polytechnic of Namibia/Denmark’s Technical University
  Since 2002 biologists monitoring the penguin colonies near Luederitz, Namibia have recorded many episodes of finding oil-covered penguins. A likely cause is the penguins encountered oil slicks at sea from unlawful tank-discharging by ships. The events provide dates and locations to search for any existing historic SAR imagery in an attempt to find the oil slicks which the penguins encountered and get an idea of where the dumping occurred and the areal size of the slicks.Offshore southern Namibia the large Luederitz upwelling cell of the Benguela Current brings cold, nutrient rich waters up to the surface producing a high abundance of biological activity from the base of the food chain such as plankton and algal blooms up to the largest marine animals like large populations of fish, seals and sea birds, including African Penguins. The cold current influences the weather too and foggy days are very common, especially offshore. With the hot Namib Desert coming right up to the coast and polar waters upwelling just offshore the temperature contrast is extreme, fueling coastal winds that frequently peak well over 15 m/s.This environment makes the accurate interpretation of radar imagery challenging amongst upwelling filaments, convergent water fronts, highly variable winds, biogenic oils and there may be sub-sea oil seeps in the region too. There are also many ship wrecks on the sea floor and beach, some vessels quite large. Due to the prevalence of offshore fog using optical imagery such as from MODIS to augment the radar interpretation can not be relied upon. The search for anthropogenic oil slicks here is an ambitious task.The Namibian coastline is uninhabited except for a handful of small communities entirely in the south. There is essentially no regular coastal observation worth mentioning and this makes it the perfect place for illegal oil dumping and according to the penguin data the ships know this. This project is a counter-measure to the oil dumping and hopes to demonstrate the utility of radar observation for environmental protection.The salient theme of this study is to characterize the historic oil spills. Knowing the position of an oil slick tells biologists where the penguins are going in their hunting and migration routes. Physical scientists learn marine circulation patterns by comparing where slicks at sea made landfall or met a penguin from a certain colony. Matching oil slicks with any existing ship position data might also identify culprits. If the possibility of being caught by radar is publicized it might also deter ship captains from practicing illegal oil dumping.

 

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12h00 Mike Inggs Conference Closing, Tea/Coffee, Wrap-up
University of Cape Town (UCT)

 

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12h15-13h15 Lunch