
Plant-Stress Measurements Using Laser-Induced Fluorescence Excitation: Poland Experiment
Author(s) -
Gene A. Capelle,
Steve Jones
Publication year - 1999
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/10608
Subject(s) - instrumentation (computer programming) , remote sensing , laser , vegetation (pathology) , environmental science , fluorescence , uranium , computer science , optics , geology , physics , nuclear physics , medicine , pathology , operating system
Bechtel Nevada's Special Technologies Laboratory (STL) has been involved in remote sensing for many years, and in April 1995 STL began to study the use of active remote sensing for detecting plant stress. This work was motivated by the need to detect subsurface contamination, with the supposition that this could be accomplished by remote measurement of optical signatures from the overgrowing vegetation. The project has been a cooperative DOE/Disney effort, in which basic optical signature measurements (primarily fluorescence) were done at the Disney greenhouse facilities at Epcot Center in Florida, using instrumentation developed by STL on DOE funding. The primary instrument is a LIFI system, which had originally been developed for detection of surface uranium contamination at DOE sites. To deal specifically with the plant stress measurements, a LIFS system was built that utilizes the same laser, but captures the complete fluorescence spectrum from blue to red wavelengths. This system had continued to evolve, and the version in existence in September 1997 was sent to Poland, accompanied by two people from STL, for the purpose of making the measurements described in this report