Researcher helps watch for floods in Alaska
May 12, 2015
Yuri Bult-Ito
907-474-2462
TVresearcher Jessica Cherry has been flying over Alaska rivers and taking photographs for the National Weather Service’s Riverwatch program, which monitors rivers with a risk of flooding.
Her images capture more details than products derived from satellites.
Cherry, a hydrologist at the TV International Arctic Research Center, takes high-definition photos of the rivers with a camera, shooting through a port in a plane. She then merges them together by using a 3-D image-processing software program.
Cherry shares these images with the National Weather Service, which enhances the agency’s real-time monitoring. The images also provide its River Forecast Center with a detailed record of the breakup process, which can be used to improve future forecasts.
Scientists’ research is not limited to publications in scientific journals, Cherry noted. “We also do very hands-on work that can be used in near-real time to help our agencies make better decisions for communities.”
ON THE WEB: (click on 5-6-2015, at 3:53).
ADDITIONAL CONTACT: Jessica Cherry, International Arctic Research Center, 907-474-5730, jessica.cherry@alaska.edu.
YB/5-12-15/285-15

