Reconstructing Digital Terrain Models from ArcticDEM and WorldView-2 Imagery in Livengood, Alaska

Tianqi Zhang, Desheng Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

ArcticDEM provides the public with an unprecedented opportunity to access very high-spatial resolution digital elevation models (DEMs) covering the pan-Arctic surfaces. As it is generated from stereo-pairs of optical satellite imagery, ArcticDEM represents a mixture of a digital surface model (DSM) over a non-ground areas and digital terrain model (DTM) at bare grounds. Reconstructing DTM from ArcticDEM is thus needed in studies requiring bare ground elevation, such as modeling hydrological processes, tracking surface change dynamics, and estimating vegetation canopy height and associated forest attributes. Here we proposed an automated approach for estimating DTM from ArcticDEM in two steps: (1) identifying ground pixels from WorldView-2 imagery using a Gaussian mixture model (GMM) with local refinement by morphological operation, and (2) generating a continuous DTM surface using ArcticDEMs at ground locations and spatial interpolation methods (ordinary kriging (OK) and natural neighbor (NN)). We evaluated our method at three forested study sites characterized by different canopy cover and topographic conditions in Livengood, Alaska, where airborne lidar data is available for validation. Our results demonstrate that (1) the proposed ground identification method can effectively identify ground pixels with much lower root mean square errors (RMSEs) (<0.35 m) to the reference data than the comparative state-of-the-art approaches; (2) NN performs more robustly in DTM interpolation than OK; (3) the DTMs generated from NN interpolation with GMM-based ground masks decrease the RMSEs of ArcticDEM to 0.648 m, 1.677 m, and 0.521 m for Site-1, Site-2, and Site-3, respectively. This study provides a viable means of deriving high-resolution DTM from ArcticDEM that will be of great value to studies focusing on the Arctic ecosystems, forest change dynamics, and earth surface processes.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2061
JournalRemote Sensing
Volume15
Issue number8
DOIs
StatePublished - Apr 2023
Externally publishedYes

Funding

This research was funded by the National Science Foundation under grant #1724786.

FundersFunder number
National Science Foundation1724786

    Keywords

    • ArcticDEM
    • Gaussian mixture model
    • WordView-2
    • digital elevation model
    • digital terrain model
    • natural neighbor
    • ordinary kriging
    • spatial interpolation

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