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Satnews Daily
January 20th, 2020

TCarta Developing ICESat-2 Bathymetric Product


TCarta Marine is commercializing a new technique to derive highly accurate shallow-water bathymetry measurements from NASA’s ICESat-2 satellite data — the new methodology is being developed by TCarta with funding from the National Science Foundation (NSF).


Satellite-derived bathymetric (SDB) measurement data capture of the Maldives. Image is courtesy of TCarta.

In 2018, NSF awarded TCarta a Phase 1 Small Business Innovation Research (SBIR) grant to commercialize new satellite-derived bathymetric (SDB) measurement technologies. Referred to as Project Trident, the research focused on leveraging Artificial Intelligence (AI) - machine learning and computer vision - to determine shallow-water seafloor depth in variable water conditions.

NSF awarded TCarta a $750,000 Phase 2 grant in late 2019 to continue Project Trident for an additional two years. Phase 2 will incorporate the new ICESat-2 research into the project’s original objective of enhancing existing SDB technologies with AI capabilities to measure seafloor depths in diverse water conditions.

TCarta pioneered the application of high-resolution optical satellite imagery for seafloor depth measurement in 2014 with commercialization of a proprietary technique. This SDB technology, however, was limited to the relatively calm and clear waters of shallow coastal areas. In 2018, TCarta teamed with jOmegak of San Carlos, Calif., and DigitalGlobe of Maxar Technologies (DigitalGlobe) of Westminster, Colo., on Project Trident.


Artistic rendition of NASA's ICESat-2 on-orbit. Image is courtesy of Northrop Grumman.

The Project Trident team added ICESat-2 space-based laser data to the project shortly after the small satellite’s launch in 2018. Developed by NASA and the University of Texas, ICESat-2 (Ice, Cloud & land Elevation Satellite) was designed primarily for polar ice elevation and tree canopy measurements, but the green laser altimeter onboard has proved remarkably accurate at gauging seafloor depths down to 100 feet below the surface.

TCarta  is developing a software tool incorporating AI algorithms to automatically extract bathymetric measurements from ICESat-2 data sets. This tool will soon be available for beta testing.

Parties interested in serving as beta testers for the ICESat-2 tool or other Project Trident software components should contact Project Trident Principal Investigator, Kyle Goodrich, at trident@tcarta.com or please complete the online Project Trident survey (www.tcarta.com/blog/survey).

TCarta President Kyle Goodrich said that as participants in NASA’s Applied Users Program, the company incorporated laser data from ICESat-2 as a validation tool for the enhanced SDB technologies under development. The results were so impressive the firm plans to introduce a stand-alone ICESat-2 bathymetric data extraction tool as one of several commercial products from our NSF work. He continued that the the breakthroughs that were made with NSF funding will enable TCarta to apply SDB technology in geographic areas and water conditions not previously possible. The results will have commercial impacts on marine operations related to oil & gas exploration and production, coastal infrastructure engineering, environmental monitoring, and geospatial intelligence (GEOINT) activities.