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Flood Inundation Surface Topology (FIST) Modeling and Applications

Kevin Dobbs, National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency

Usage Details

James Phillips, Kevin Dobbs

Emergency response to flooding following extreme weather events is limited by the lack of accurate and timely maps of flood extent and depth. Image-based flood mapping approaches are limited by daylight and miss areas obscured by buildings, clouds, cloud shadows, trees, and other vegetation. Alternative approaches based on hydrodynamic models depend on gaged stream data, which is available in only a limited number of locations where measuring equipment is installed. The Flood Inundation Surface Topology (FIST) model combines previously obtained terrain elevation maps (such as from the EarthDEM project) with limited concurrent remote sensing observations such as zero-depth points to generate detailed and real-time flood inundation maps.

When deployed as an automated workflow, the FIST model will decrease the delivery latency of critical wide area flood depth maps to emergency responders. Accurate and timely flood maps based on observed data will be invaluable for mobility, logistical, structural, and economic impact analysis.