Title: Outline
1Remote Sensing
- Outline
- definition of remote sensing
- components of system
- electromagnetic radiation
- nature of an image
- light interaction with atmosphere and surface
- types of remote sensors
2Remote Sensing
- science and art of obtaining information about
something from a distance. - analysis of collected data to obtain information
about the objects, areas or phenomenon under
investigation.
3Components of System
4Components of System
- Data Analysis
- examining the data using various viewing and
interpretation devices to analyze pictorial data
and/or a computer to analyze digital sensor data
(i.e. GIS).
5Electromagnetic Radiation
- Energy Sources
- energy available from sun is described by
electromagnetic spectrum
6Electromagnetic Radiation
Wavelength - distance from one wave crest to
another. Frequency - number of wave crests
passing a fixed point in a given period of time.
Measured in hertz (1 cycle per second)
7Electromagnetic Radiation
Amplitude - height of each peak. Measured as
spectral irradiance
8Electromagnetic Radiation
- Ultraviolet Radiation - 0.4 micrometers
- not much is done with UV for remote sensing since
these shorter wavelengths are easily scattered by
the atmosphere
9Electromagnetic Radiation
Visible Radiation BLUE (.4-.5 micrometers) GREEN
(.5-.6 micrometers) RED (.6-.73 micrometers)
10Electromagnetic Radiation
- Infrared Radiation - .72 - 15 micrometers
- Near Infrared - reflected, can be recorded on film
- Mid Infrared - reflected, can be detected using
electro-optical sensors. - Thermal Infrared - emitted, can only be detected
using electro-optical sensors
11Electromagnetic Radiation
Microwave Radiation - radar sensors, wavelengths
range from 1mm to 1m
12Electromagnetic Radiation
- most systems rely on the sun to generate all the
EM energy needed to image terrestrial surfaces -
passive sensors. - other sensors generate their own energy, called
active sensors, transmits that energy in a
certain direction and records the portion
reflected back by features within the signal path
13Light Interaction with Atmosphere
- atmospheric modification of incoming and outgoing
EM radiation includes scattering, refraction and
absorption
- Scattering
- redirection of light by particles
- can be in any direction
14Light Interaction with Atmosphere
- General Effects of Scattering
- causes skylight (allows us to see in shadow)
- forces image to record the brightness of the
atmosphere in addition to the target. - directs reflected light away from the sensor,
decreasing spatial detail (fuzzy images) - tends to make dark objects lighter and light
objects darker (reduces contrast)
15Light Interaction with Atmosphere
- Refraction
- bending of light when it passes through two media
- degrades spectral signatures on hot- humid days
16Light Interaction with Atmosphere
- Absorption
- mostly caused by three atmospheric gases ozone,
carbon dioxide and water vapour
17Light Interaction with Surface
- Reflection
- the bouncing of electromagnetic energy from a
surface - type of reflection is dependent on the size of
the surface irregularities relative to the
incident wavelength.
18Light Interaction with Surface
- Specular Reflectance
- light is reflected in a single direction -
'mirror' reflection - specular reflectance helps and hinders remote
sensing
19Light Interaction with Surface
- Diffuse/Lambertian Reflectance
- energy is reflected equally in all directions
- many natural surfaces act as a diffuse reflector
to some extent.
20Nature of the Image
- image model target features described through
the use of spectral reflectance - software and hardware specially designed to
analyze these images give us the ability to see a
pictorial rendition of targets. - images that we see on a computer screen are made
up of picture elements called pixels.
21Nature of the image
- Pixel - picture element having both spatial and
spectral properties. - the spatial property defines the "on ground"
height and width. - the spectral property defines the intensity of
spectral response for a cell in a particular band
22Nature of the Image
23Nature of the Image
- when only one band of the EM spectrum is sensed,
the output device (colour monitor) renders the
pixels in shades of grey
24Nature of the Image
- multispectral sensors detect light reflectance in
more than one or two bands of the EM spectrum.
- these bands represent different data - when
combined into the red, green, blue guns of a
color monitor, they form different colors
25Nature of the Image
- multispectral image is composed of 'n' rows and
'n' columns of pixels in each of three or more
spectral bands
26Aerial Photography/Airphoto
- most common, versatile and economic form of
remote sensing - spectral range 0.3 to 0.9 mm (visible portion of
spectrum). - photogrammetry is the science, art and technology
of obtaining reliable measurements, maps, other
derived products from photographs.
27ADVANTAGES OF AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY
- Five Basic Advantages
- Improved vantage point
- Capability to stop action
- Permanent recording
- Broadened spectral sensitivity
- Increased spatial resolution and geometric
fidelity
28Aerial Photography/Airphoto
- camera produces a large-format 23x23cm photo
- contain high precision/well calibrated lenses
that minimize spatial distortions - motor-driven film advances 60 overlap between
successive exposures
- panchromatic, black-and-white, true-colour film
29Aerial Photography/Airphoto
- Grey scale step wedge
- Notes
- Altimeter
- Fiducial marks
- Clock
- Lens serial number
- Focal length
- Frame number
- Mission name and date
30Aerial Photography/Airphoto
31Aerial Photography/Airphoto
- advantages improves vantage point, capability to
stop action, permanent recording, broadened
spectral sensitivity, increased spatial
resolution. - disadvantages cant get at elevation, not
appropriate for urban areas (tall buildings block
information) - applications land use/land cover mapping,
geologic and soil mapping, agricultural
application, forest applications, wildlife
ecology, etc.
32Satellite Remote Sensors
- currently there are 2777 satellites orbiting the
earth (US 878) - multi-purpose
- scientific
- defense
- communications
- global positioning system (GPS)
33Satellite Remote Sensors
- geostationary orbiting satellites are those that
remain stationary relative to a point on the
surface of the earth - i.e. communications and meteorological
satellites
34Satellite Remote Sensors
- polar-orbiting satellites are those in which the
position of the satellites orbital plane is kept
constant relative to the sun. - i.e. Landsat satellite series
35ACTIVE VS PASSIVE REMOTE SENSING
- Passive Remote Sensing
- measure natural radiation emitted by target
or/and radiation energy from other sources
reflected from the target - examples passive microwave radiometers, LandSat,
SPOT
36ACTIVE VS PASSIVE REMOTE SENSING
- Active Remote Sensing
- transmit their own signal and measure the energy
that is reflected or scattered back from the
target - advantages ability to see regardless of time
of day or season use wavelengths not part of
solar spectrum better control of the way target
is illuminated
37Microwave Sensors
- sensors that operate in the microwave portion of
the spectrum - advantages capable of penetrating atmosphere
under virtually all conditions, different view of
the environment. - disadvantage radar instruments have a hard time
identifying water bodies because the wavelength
is much longer than the general character of the
surface roughness - applications sea ice and snow, geologic
features, ocean bottom contours, other planets.
38Microwave Sensors
- Microwave radiometer narrow-beam antenna
attached to a scanning device - soil moisture, water content of snow, geologic
strata - Synthetic Aperture Radar shorter antenna that
emits and receives returned energy from ground
objects - day/night, clouds/cloud free operation
39Microwave Sensors
- RADARSAT
- launched in November 1995
- developed by Canada to monitor environmental
change and the planets natural resources - heart is synthetic aperture radar (SAR)
microwave instrument that sends pulsed signals to
earth and processes the received reflected pulses.
40Microwave Sensors
First RADARSAT Image
41Microwave Sensors
European SAR
42Optical Sensors
- sensors that operate in the optical portion of
spectrum, which extends from approximately 0.3 to
14 mm. - can do more with these data because it is
numbers. - look at differences in colors
- look at differences over time
- applications meteorological, ocean monitoring
(i.e. chlorophyll absorption).
43Optical Sensors
- show how much energy from the sun was being
reflected or emitted off the Earth's surface when
the image was taken. - clear water reflects little radiation, so it
looks black. - pavement and bare ground reflect a lot of
radiation, so they look bright. - urban areas usually look light blue-grey.
- vegetation absorbs visible light but reflects
infrared, so it looks red
44Optical image of Montreal area during ice storm
of 1998. Ice snow and clouds appear as various
colors of white, vegetation is green.
45Optical Sensors
GOES - Geostationary Operational Environmental
Satellite (Visible to NIR, Thermal) DMSP -
Defense Meterological Satellite Program 600 m
resolution (Visible to NIR, Thermal), urban heat
island studies Nimbus - CZCS - coastal zone color
scanner, 825 m spatial resolution AVHRR -
Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer
meteorological satellite (visible, NIR, thermal)
46(No Transcript)
47AVHRR - Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer
meteorological satellite (visible, NIR, thermal)
48AVHRR Channels
Channel Wavelength Primary Use1
0.58 - 0.68 Daytime cloud/surface
mapping 2 0.725 - 1.10
Surface water delineation, ice and snow
melt 3A 1.58 - 1.64 Snow
/ ice discrimination (NOAA K,L,M) 3
3.55 - 3.93 Sea surface temperature,
nighttime cloud mapping 4
10.30 - 11.30 Sea surface temperature,
day and night cloud mapping 5
11.50 - 12.50 Sea surface
temperature, day and night cloud
mapping
49Optical Sensors
- LANDSAT - visible, NIR spectral bands (Landsats
1,2,3), and MIR and Thermal (Landsats 4 and 5) - Multispectral scanner - 4 spectral bands Green,
Red, and 2 NIR - Thematic mapper - 7 spectral bands Blue/Green,
Green, Red, NIR, MIR, MIR, Thermal
50LANDSAT MSS image - Grand Canyon
51LANDSAT TM image - southwestern Utah and Southern
Nevada
52SPOT Image of the WTC Fires