Colorado River at Windy Gap near Granby, CO - 2021/07/27 Water Surface Velocity Map Using Particle Image Velocimetry
Dates
Publication Date
2022-03-09
Time Period
2021-07-27
Citation
DeBenedetto, G.P., Adams, J.D., and Burgess, M.A., 2022, Colorado River at Windy Gap near Granby, CO - 2021/07/27 Water Surface Velocity Map Using Particle Image Velocimetry: U.S. Geological Survey data release, https://doi.org/10.5066/P9E7UTB8.
Summary
The dataset consists of a shapefile of measurements of surface velocity magnitude and direction at the Colorado River at Windy Gap near Granby, CO, on July 27, 2021. The dataset contains approximately 1 km of river length. The surface velocity measurements were made by applying Large-Scale Particle Image Velocimetry (LSPIV) techniques, using overlapping videos collected by small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (sUAS). Total time to capture all videos was one hour and ten minutes, 11:05am to 12:15pm local time, and all frames (except frame 1, see Process Steps below) from all videos were used. Additional attributes, including divergence, curl, shear, and strain, were calculated from the surface velocity measurements and are included in the [...]
Summary
The dataset consists of a shapefile of measurements of surface velocity magnitude and direction at the Colorado River at Windy Gap near Granby, CO, on July 27, 2021. The dataset contains approximately 1 km of river length. The surface velocity measurements were made by applying Large-Scale Particle Image Velocimetry (LSPIV) techniques, using overlapping videos collected by small Unmanned Aircraft Systems (sUAS). Total time to capture all videos was one hour and ten minutes, 11:05am to 12:15pm local time, and all frames (except frame 1, see Process Steps below) from all videos were used. Additional attributes, including divergence, curl, shear, and strain, were calculated from the surface velocity measurements and are included in the dataset. This data is ideal for instantaneous discharge, shear, strain, and divergence, but less so for eddies and mean reach values. This is because the frame rate of 30-frames-per-second more accurately profiles and averages instantaneous values seen during the capture interval as opposed to the stability of an eddy or representative mean values of a longer capture interval.
Click on title to download individual files attached to this item.
CoRvr@WindyGap.xml Original FGDC Metadata
View
43.54 KB
application/fgdc+xml
CoWindyGap_Vectors_UTM13_NAD83.zip
5.83 MB
application/zip
Purpose
The data were collected as a collaboration with the USGS's Colorado Water Science Center, the National Unmanned Aircraft Systems Project Office and the Arizona Water Science Center. This aerial data collection was coincidental to in-stream near-surface velocity measurements for accuracy analysis. Data collection and processing techniques were built upon methodology being researched by the USGS Surface Velocity Workgroup and the USGS Hydrologic Remote Sensing Branch.