9:30 AM - 9:45 AM
[STT34-03] Operation and development of airborne portable thermal imaging camera systems
Keywords:a portable cameras system, volcano observations, infrared camera
In the observations of Mt. Nasu from 2021 to 2023, experimental observations of brightness temperatures, etc. around Mt. Nasu (the Avici hell) from a helicopter (Bell Type 206B: owned by HeliService Inc.) were made by STIC-P on 14 November 2021, 21 October 2022, and 26 October 2023. The observation conditions were as follows: the observation altitude was 2700 m above sea level, the measurement line was oblique from a circumferential measurement line with a radius of 1500 m centred on Mt. Nasu, and multiple superimposed brightness temperature image data were acquired. SfM/MVS processing was applied to these images to produce orthorectified images. From that, the brightness temperature distribution, etc. at Mt. Nasu (near the Avici hell ) could be quantified. The highest brightness temperature observed on 14 November 2021 was 54.0 °C, measured at fumarole A on the western slope, with a heat discharge rate of 0.195 MW. The highest brightness temperature observed on 21 October 2022, also measured at fumarole A, was 62.8°C, with a heat discharge rate of 0.188 MW. The highest brightness temperature observed on 26 October 2023, also measured at fumarole A, was 51.2°C, with a heat discharge rate of 0.140 MW. The brightness, temperature distribution and shape of fumarole A on the western slope measured during these observations were judged to be similar over a period of about two years. This suggests that SPIC-P can be used to determine thermal activity.
The latest development is a camera that increases the pixel number of the current infrared camera from VGA (640 x 480) to XGA (1024 x 768), improving the instantaneous field of view from the current 0.69mrad to 0.47mrad. In the development of a multi-band infrared camera, an uncooled camera (VGA) and cooled cameras (QVGA and VGA) have been developed to selectively observe the 8-9 µm infrared region with the aim of visualizing sulphur dioxide gas. Aso Nakadake and Mt. Asama in 2020-2023, these cameras were used to visualize the distribution of sulphur dioxide gas in the plume and to estimate its concentration (approximately 0.5-20ppmv). An airborne version of these instruments is under development. Airborne test observations will be carried out in the future.