A study on spreading direction of coal-fire based with TIR remote sensing in wuda coalfield from 2000 to 2006, Northern China

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Abstract

Coal fires are a common and serious problem in most coal producing countries. Coal fires could not only lead to a huge loss of non-renewable energy resources, but it also can cause many environmental problems such as GHG emission, land subsidence and increment of surface temperature. So it is very important to monitor the dynamic changes of coal fires. As far as large scale coal field, remote sensing provided researchers with a new and useful technique for coal fire detection. This paper developed a research over coal fire spreading direction using a multi-temporal TIR remote sensing approach. The results successfully showed that the direction of coal fire spreading and predicted the coal fire direction of development on a regional scale or on a whole coal field scale, and a quantitative analysis of coal fires was made in the research. The results showed that the coal fires had an average annual increase of 0.5 million square meters from 1999 to 2006, and the TIR remote sensing proved to be an available tool for coal fire mapping and prediction of coal fire development.

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Huo, H. Y., Jiang, X. G., Song, X. F., Ni, Z. Y., Gao, C. X., Zhang, Y. Z., & Liu, L. (2014). A study on spreading direction of coal-fire based with TIR remote sensing in wuda coalfield from 2000 to 2006, Northern China. In IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science (Vol. 17). Institute of Physics Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/17/1/012087

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