Faculty Publications

Document Type

Article

Abstract

Oceanic surface currents are estimated from analysis of short duration video obtained by a nadir facing camera installed on a bridge over a tidal inlet. Data analyzed consisted of 13 two-minute video clips captured approximately every 40 min over a period of 8 hr, covering a significant portion of the tidal cycle. Surface current speed and direction estimates are obtained from each collected video using (i) a method originally developed for analysis of imagery from drones (CopterCurrents) and (ii) a particle tracking method. The horizontal (u, v) surface current velocity components and total horizontal velocity magnitude, obtained from the two methods, were in very good agreement with each other (R 2 = .96 and Root Mean Square (RMS) differences of 0.12 m/s or less). Our analysis suggests that video cameras from stationary structures can provide surface flow measurements over inland waters and navigational channels where deployment of in-situ sensors is not feasible.

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

https://doi.org/10.4031/MTSJ.57.3.4

APA Citation

Middour, B., Voulgaris, G., & Cahl, D. (2023). Video Based Estimation of Surface Currents in a Tidal Inlet. Marine Technology Society Journal, 57(3), 5–15. https://doi.org/10.4031/MTSJ.57.3.4

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