Seyler et al., ESA SP-614, 2006
Seyler F., Bonnet M-P., Calmant S., Cauhopé M., Cazenave A., Cochonneau G., Divol J., Do Minh K., Frappart F., Gennero M-C., Guyenne-Blin K., Huynh F., León J.G., Maugeas M., Mercier F., Mercier C., Rocquelain G., Tocqueville L., Zanife O-Z. (2006). The CASH project, Proc. of the Symposium of 15 Years of Progress in Radar Altimetry, Venice, Italy, 13-18 March 2006, ESA SP-614.
CASH « Contribution of spatial altimetry to hydrology » aims at the definition of a global, standard, fast and long term access to a set of hydrological data concerning the greatest river basins in the world. The key questions to be answered are: what are the conditions for monitoring river water stages from altimetric radar data and how is it possible to combine altimetric data with other spatial sources or/and in-situ data in order to deliver useful parameters for hydrology community, both scientific and end users. The CASH project is ending mid-May of 2006 and there is yet a lot of tasks to be performed for altimetric heigths of continental water bodies becoming part of the scientific and end-users hydrologists day-today practice. The project has nethertheless delineated the way this use could be improved in a near future, and opened very interesting perspectives for ungauged or poorly gauged great basins in the world.
* Document PDF/PDF document (0,6 Mo)
CASH « Contribution of spatial altimetry to hydrology » aims at the definition of a global, standard, fast and long term access to a set of hydrological data concerning the greatest river basins in the world. The key questions to be answered are: what are the conditions for monitoring river water stages from altimetric radar data and how is it possible to combine altimetric data with other spatial sources or/and in-situ data in order to deliver useful parameters for hydrology community, both scientific and end users. The CASH project is ending mid-May of 2006 and there is yet a lot of tasks to be performed for altimetric heigths of continental water bodies becoming part of the scientific and end-users hydrologists day-today practice. The project has nethertheless delineated the way this use could be improved in a near future, and opened very interesting perspectives for ungauged or poorly gauged great basins in the world.
* Document PDF/PDF document (0,6 Mo)