NASA Helps Toxic Algae Struggle

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NASA Helps Toxic Algae Struggle

NASA gets involved in toxic algae struggle on the Ohio River

Little bright-green flecks of algae, floating as deep and as far as the eye could see, greeted a group of scientists on the Ohio River Friday morning.

They had pulled up in a boat with their scientific instruments to the spot where the region sucks up much of its drinking water through underwater intakes.

Water officials had hoped the situation would have improved by now, but tests show that the algae bloom – the largest ever recorded on the Ohio River – has expanded over the last week from a 500-mile stretch to a 600-mile stretch, according to authorities at the Ohio River Valley Water Sanitation Commission, the organization that monitors the river’s health.

The researchers, two from the commission, one from Bowling Green State University and another from a company that makes high-tech water quality meters, prepped their equipment and waited.

Until a Twin Otter, a twin-engine turboprop plane, came into view.

Aboard were NASA researchers, who had made the trip to Cincinnati from NASA’s John H. Glenn Research Center in Cleveland, with a hyperspectral imager and miniature spectrometers.

This technology has been used for a few years in NASA’s algal bloom observation project but it was the first time ever flying a swath of river near Cincinnati.

NASA has two primary goals with this project, said project manager Larry Liou, an earth science coordinator at NASA.

The first is to understand the capabilities and limitations of the equipment for future use by NASA in space and on Earth. This is the same technology that is being considered for a Mars mission, Liou said.

The second goal is to provide state and local authorities with more data to better understand the algal blooms.

Each species on the planet – or beyond – has a different interaction with light, Liou explains, and with what they reflect or what they absorb.

These instruments take a measurement that provides us with a spectral fingerprint that should always be identical and can eventually be identified.

Liou’s team is closing in on being able to determine what algae is toxic and what isn’t, from the air.

Within about three years, Liou believes scientists will have such a degree of confidence and certainty in identifying these toxins through spectral imagery that laymen will be able to interpret the images themselves – even potentially obtain them themselves – with unmanned aerial devices.

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