Water surface roughness is important but challenging to measure parameter which reflects the energy transfer at the air-water interface. This paper presents a field experiment obtaining lake surface video images (Fig. 1). Also, it establishes the relationship between the aerodynamic roughness of the lake surface (or wind speed) and the characteristics of the lake surface video images based on texture features and fractal dimensions. This work is a preliminary study of sea surface roughness measurement. The texture features and fractal dimensions are calculated by using the methods of gray level co-occurrence matrix, gray level-gradient co-occurrence matrix, autocorrelation function, Tamura texture feature, fractional Brownian motion autocorrelation, box counting, improved box counting, gray statistical increment, gray statistical definition and area measurement. The empirical values of lake surface roughness are found from measured wind speed and an empirical relation. The correlations between lake surface roughness (or wind speed) and texture features (or fractal dimensions) are evaluated based on the data from the field experiment. Furthermore, three types of noises with different parameters are introduced to the lake surface video images. Then noise suppression performances of these methods are evaluated. The experiments have demonstrated that lake surface image roughness calculated by texture (or fractal) methods and empirical relation between wind speed and lake surface roughness is effective for analyzing lake surface roughness. The running time of various methods is calculated to analyze the possibility of real-time detection. Plans for further investigation of lake or sea surface roughness features are also discussed.
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