ASTER Thermal Anomalies in Western Colorado
This layer contains the areas identified as areas of anomalous surface temperature from ASTER satellite imagery. The temperature is calculated using the Emissivity Normalization Algorithm that separate temperature from emissivity. Areas that had temperature greater than 2o, and areas with temperature equal to 1o to 2o, were considered ASTER modeled very warm and warm surface exposures (thermal anomalies), respectively
Note: 'o' is used in place of lowercase sigma in this description.
Citation Formats
Flint Geothermal, LLC. (2013). ASTER Thermal Anomalies in Western Colorado [data set]. Retrieved from https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148769.
E., Richard. ASTER Thermal Anomalies in Western Colorado. United States: N.p., 01 Jan, 2013. Web. doi: 10.15121/1148769.
E., Richard. ASTER Thermal Anomalies in Western Colorado. United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148769
E., Richard. 2013. "ASTER Thermal Anomalies in Western Colorado". United States. https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148769. https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/296.
@div{oedi_296, title = {ASTER Thermal Anomalies in Western Colorado}, author = {E., Richard.}, abstractNote = {This layer contains the areas identified as areas of anomalous surface temperature from ASTER satellite imagery. The temperature is calculated using the Emissivity Normalization Algorithm that separate temperature from emissivity. Areas that had temperature greater than 2o, and areas with temperature equal to 1o to 2o, were considered ASTER modeled very warm and warm surface exposures (thermal anomalies), respectively
Note: 'o' is used in place of lowercase sigma in this description.
}, doi = {10.15121/1148769}, url = {https://gdr.openei.org/submissions/296}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2013}, month = {01}}
https://dx.doi.org/10.15121/1148769
Details
Data from Jan 1, 2013
Last updated Aug 23, 2021
Submitted Feb 26, 2014
Organization
Flint Geothermal, LLC
Contact
Richard E. Zehner
775.737.7806
Authors
Keywords
geothermal, Colorado, Remote Sensing, ASTER, GIS, shapefile, shape file, geospatial, ArcGIS, geospatial data, anomaly detection, surface anomaly, surface temperature, algorithm, thermal anomalies, surface exposuresDOE Project Details
Project Name Recovery Act: Use Remote Sensing Data (selected visible and infrared spectrums) to locate high temp ground anomalies in Colorado.Confirm heat flow potential w/ on-site temp surveys to drill deep resource wells
Project Lead Mark Ziegenbein
Project Number EE0002828