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Options for access to multisource fire data John Owens Department of Geography University of Maryland One GOFC Fire Goal • Make fire data available in near-real time on the web from multiple instruments (MODIS, AVHRR, TRMM, DMSP, ATSR, GOES) for science and natural resource management – This will improve temporal/spatial coverage and allow comparisons between sensors/algorithms How to get there 1st Step • For simplicity and ready integration into existing work, make the fire detection file format simple – Plain text file – Include at a minimum Lat, Lon, Date, Time of fire detection – Using a universal format for all data providers makes it easier to incorporate the data Available Data Sources • AVHRR through the World Fire Web • MODIS through the MODIS Rapid Response System • DMSP through the DMSP processing systems • Future Developments: – TRMM through NASA GSFC – Aqua MODIS when launched – Direct Broadcast MODIS Fire from receiving stations AVHRR Fire Detections • Available through the World Fire Web nodes • Text files of Lat, Lon of fire detections available for download (.fpp files) • Depending on whether obtained from JRC (global collection) or a regional node (local coverage), delivery time varies (1-2 days) MODIS Rapid Response System • On the web at http://rapidfire.sci.gsfc.nasa.gov • RGB Color MODIS imagery (250m, 500m, 1km) with fire detections overlaid, fire detections produced from same MOD14 MODIS standard product algorithm • Global land surface coverage, ~4 hour delivery time • Also, MODIS fire detections available as a flat text file format for FTP – Fields (Lat/Lon/BTemp/Date/Time) ~4 hour delivery time – (Ftp://modis-sde.geog.umd.edu) MODIS Direct Broadcast • Direct Broadcast will have a time advantage in availability of data • Close to release is a free, open source software package for MODIS Fire (uses the same algorithm as the MODIS Rapid Response System) – Will produce same format fire detection text files as MODIS RR System – Contact Jacques Descloitres ([email protected]) for more information on availability • Will local DB stations make available data over the web? Web Fire Maps • On the web at http://firemaps.geog.umd.edu • Fire detections from MODIS Rapid Response System available for viewing in regional WebGIS maps, combined with GIS datasets from GOFC partners • Goal is to integrate multiple fire data sources and find regional hosting partners for the system • SE Asia web map produced with data from SEARIN CD set—can anyone contribute regional or national GIS layers to help us make the SE Asia products better? Fire Feature Servers • An improved method of delivery—using your GIS software, just connect to the feature service on the web providing the fire dataset, and use the complete, up-to-date archive of data currently available. • A prototype MODIS fire feature server is available – http://firemaps.geog.umd.edu – Use ArcGIS 8.1 to connect and query the spatial database of global fire detections The Way Forward • Encourage all fire data providers to make their data freely available in near-real time on the web (we’re getting there) • Use the multi-source data for synthesis products and intercomparison • Investigate more advanced products (burn scar products under development) • Once we have fire data available on the web, work to improve delivery mechanisms (e.g. fire feature server technology)