Remote Sensing Lecture Slides
Remote Sensing Lecture Slides
25/08/2011
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Remote Sensing: The use of Electronic Radiation Sensors to record images of the environment, which can be interpreted to yield useful information (Curran, 1985)
Processing
Sensor
Object Physical Components of RS: 1. Source 2. Atmospheric interaction 3. Interaction with object 4. Sensor 5. Processor
nm= 10-9 m m= 10-6 m cm= 10-2 m Electro-Magnetic Radiation = (Wave model of light ) Q= h = h (c/ ) (Particle model of light) C= velocity of light ( 3 X 10 8 m/s) = Wavelength (m) = frequency (cycles per second; Hz) h= Plancks constant (6.6262 X 10-34 Js Energy radiated by any body depends upon its absolute temperature and emissivity and is function of wavelengths: Stefan-Boltzmann s law
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
2. Atmospheric Interaction
Particles and Gases of Atmosphere affects the radiation via absorption and scattering. Scattering by molecules of size smaller than the wavelength of EM waves cause Rayleigh scattering. O2, NO2, CO2 etc are the cause. These cause smaller wavelengths of light to scatter more than longer wavelengths. Sky is blue in a clear midday. Scattering by aerosols with size larger than EM waves is Mie Scattering. Water drops, haze, dusts, Pollens etc are the cause. Non-selective scattering are caused by much larger particles than wavelength. This distribution of all the wavelength is nearly equally scattered. E.g. clouds. Ozone, Water Vapours, CO2 absorb radiation of particular wavelengths.
2. Atmospheric Interaction
Atmospheric Transmission windows are the region of the spectrum which are not influenced by the atmospheric absorbents. For remote sensing the windows in range of 0.35 to 2.5 m in visible and reflected IR region (Optical region) , narrow windows in range of 3 to 5 m and a broad window from 8 to 14 are of interest.
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Question hour:
1. What are the advantage/disadvantage of air-borne (aerial) remote sensing and space-borne remote sensing? 2. What is electromagnetic spectrum? 3. Why clouds appear white? 4. Define atmospheric window.
5. What time of the year, remote sensing for forest area of Nepal will be most suitable and why?
1. At an altitude of 20,200 km, 24 satellites located in 6 orbital planes inclined at 630 to the equator is sufficient to ensure that there will be at least 4 satellites visible, anytime anywhere on the earth 2. At present there are 31 GPS satellites since 1978. 3. The orbital period is 11 h 58 min so that each satellite make 2 revolution in one sidereal day. In solar day, the satellites will be in same position in sky about 4 min earlier each day.
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Basic of GPS
GPS satellite signals have following components:
Carrier waves: L1 (1575,42 MHz) and L2(1227.60MHz) Ranging codes in the carrier waves using Code division multiple access (CDMA) scheme: determines the transit time of signal. Navigation message: orbital information (ephemeris), satellite clock error parameter etc (Almanac)
The transit time when multiplied by speed of light, gives the distance of satellite and the receiver. With 4 satellites, the distance of the receiver is in 3D on Trilateration basis, because the accuracy will be high with at least 4 satellites. Errors: Ionosphere and Troposphere delay Orbital and Transit time error Less satellites and position Signal multipath
Fundamental sensor types are Across-track scanning sensor (Whiskbroom scanner) and Along-track scanning sensor (Pushbroom scanner). Whiskbroom scans the earth surface perpendicular to the direction of satellite movement. Eg. NOAA/AVHRR, Landsat/TM. Pushbroom scans parallel to the direction of motion. Eg. SPOT-1, IKONOS
Owned by: US Department of Commerce. Sensor: Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR-3) Orbit: 812 km, Sun-Synchronous, 98.70 inclination Swath: 2800 km (FOV=1100) Revisit time; 2-14 times /day Spectral bands (m): 0.58-0.68 (1), 0.73-1.00(2),1.58-1.64(3A day),3.553.93 (3B night), 10.3-11.3 (4), 11.5-12.5 (5)
Spatial resolution: 1 km (at Nadir) , 6 kmX2 km (at limb) Data Archive: www.sa.noaa.gov
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Landsat-5 and 7: NASA and US Geological Survey (USGS) Sensor: TM and ETM+ Orbit: 705 km, Sun-Synchronous, 98.20 inclination Swath: 185 km (FOV=150) Revisit time; 16 days Spectral bands (m): 0.45-0.52 (1), 0.52-0.6 (2),0.63-0.69 (3),0.760.90 (4), 1.55-1.75 (5), 10.4-12.5 (6), 2.08-2.34(7),0.50-0.90 (PAN) Spatial resolution: 15m (PAN), 30m (band 1-5,7), 60m (band 6) Data Archive: http://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/images/ Envisat: Environmental Satellite; European Space Agency Sensors: Advanced SAR(ASAR), Medium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer
Resourcesat-1: Indian Space Research Agency Sensor: Linear Imaging Self-Scanning Sensor (LISS-4) Orbit: 817 km, Sun-Synchronous, 98.80 inclination Swath: 185 km (FOV=150) Revisit time: 24 days Spectral bands (m): 0.52- 0.59, 0.62- 0.68 , 0.77- 0.86 Spatial resolution: 6m Data Archive: http://landsat.gsfc.nasa.gov/images/ TerraSAR-X: German Aerospace Center and EADS Astrium GmbH Source: 965GHz. Sensor: X-band SAR antenna Orbit: 514 km sun synchronous, 97.440 Swath: width (10km 100km) length (5 km to 1650 km) Revisit time: 2.5 days at maximum. CALIPSO: Cloud-Aerosol Lidar with Orthogonal Polarization Owner: NASA (US) and Centre National dEtudes Spatiales (CNES, France) Source: 532 nm and 1064 nm with pulse repetition of 20.16 Hz.
Spatial Resolution: 125m, 333m,1km,5km, Swath: 1km X 70 km
(MERIS), GOMOS (Global Ozone Monitoring by Occultation of Stars), RA -2 (Radar Altimeter),MWR (Microwave Radiometer), MIPAS(Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric Sounding) along with other complementary instruments.
Orbit: 800 km, Sun-Synchronous, 98.60 inclination Swath: 56 to 405 km (ASAR), 1150 km (MERIS) Revisit time; 35 days Spectral bands (m): C-band (ASAR), 15 bands in 0.39-1.04 m EM Spectrum (MERIS; programmable) Spatial resolution: 30m or 150m (ASAR), 300m land and 1200m Ocean (MERIS) Data Archive: http://earth.esa.int/dataproducts/
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Image or Photo Interpretation is meant for information extraction. Information extraction can be Human method (Image interpretation) and Computer method (Digital Image processing)
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Kinds of photographs: Vertical: camera axis vertical 900: Nadir view Oblique: Off Nadir view
For any point (pixel) in at least two images we calculate the 3rd dimension (terrain coordinates) and this is the principle task in Photogrammetry. We need all the geometric parameters in the situations of when we take photos/images. Using the geometric parameters, we set the equation of rays [P P] and [P P] and calculating their intersection. Once the 3D coordinates are known, we can digitize maps, calculate distance, volume, slopes etc in Photogrammetry.
Films and Filters Photogrammetry can be considered as a traditional approach to remote sensing. Because, all the calculation process achieved from photogrammetry can be easily developed as algorithm in computers and are available in remote sensing/GIS softwares.
Satellite imageries record reflected rays form target across several wavelengths in UV-Radio waves, hence are called: Multi-Channel, Multi-band or Multi-Spectral data.
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Multi-band images are stored/represented by combination of spatial position (pixel number and line number) Satellite images may be in BSQ, BIL or BIP format. Band squential (BSQ) the spatial position for each band is separately arranged Band interleaved by line (BIL) data are arranged in the order of band number and repeated with respect to line number Band interleaved by pixel (BIP) stores data with first line of first band, first line of second band and so on.
Resolution of Image:
Spatial Resolution (objects on ground) Spectral Resolution (portion of EMR) Radiometric Resolution (level of signal) Temporal Resolution (Sensor re-visit time) Spatial Resolution is the smallest size of the object that can be picked from the ground. It is mainly determined by the Instantaneous field of view (IFOV) and the height of sensor/camera from ground. Diameter on ground (D) = Height (H) X IFOV (Radians; )
Auxiliary data are supplementary to image data that describe image file, sensor, processing method etc.
Spectral Resolution is the number and dimension of specific wavelength interval of EMR that a sensor is capable of measuring. Smaller the width of band, higher is the spectral resolution. Resolution A < Res. C < Res. B Panchromatic image consist of large width band often entire Visual Spectrum. Multispectral image have relatively large narrower several bands. Hyperspectral image has large number of narrower bands.
Radiometric Resolution is the number of unique values the sensor can record for sensed EM waves. It is expressed in bits. Bits are expressed as power of 2 and number starts from 0. 1 bit = 21= 2: sensor can record 0 and 1 2 bit =22 = 4: sensor can record 0,1,2 and 3 8 bit = 28 = 256: sensor records 0,1,2,.255
Nirmal Chaudhary
25/08/2011
Temporal resolution: Shortest period of time the sensor will pass over a same spot on the earth surface. Landsat makes 14 orbital revolution in Landsat revisits the same spot in 16 days, a day to cover whole earth. thus has temporal resolution of 16 days.
AVHRR on NOAA satellite has 12 hrs of temporal resolution. You cannot have all the resolutions higher, in same image. High Spatial Resolution= Low IFOV= Low energy sensed= Less value= Low Radiometry
Radiometric calibration/correction
There are chances the sensors recording of reflected EM energy from target does not coincide with the energy reflected form the object due to path disturbances (atmospheric, sun position and elevation, fog, haze etc). This gives radiometric distortion in image. To obtain real irradiance or reflectance, radiometric calibration is needed. Out of several methods for radiometric correction, Dark Object subtraction is one of them. It assumes that dark objects on earth surface does not reflect energy thus any value of the pixel from sensor that contains the dark object is due to atmospheric scattering. This value should be subtracted from the entire pixels of the image to get radiometrically correct image. Spectral radiance at sensor (L) for 8 bit image is obtained as:
Geometric calibration/correction
Geometric correction or Georeferencing: The process of transforming the x-y dimension of a image so that it has the same scale and project properties of a selected map projection. Ground Control Point (GCP) are needed to process the matching of points on an image with corresponding map (image) co-ordnates from which GCP is obtained. A good number of GCPs is 20 at minimum, distributed homogeneously over the image extent.
The two data sets are then used for coordinate transformation matrix, one using linear transformation. The result of Georeferencing is to produce new output grids aligned with northing and easting of reference map/image. The values of the newly acquired pixels of the output image is determined by sampling: Nearest Neighbour, Bi-linear, Cubic convolution.
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