Title: WFM 6202: Remote Sensing and GIS in Water Management
1WFM 6202 Remote Sensing and GIS in Water
Management
Part-B Geographic Information System (GIS)
Lecture-3 Input of Geospatial Data
Institute of Water and Flood Management
(IWFM) Bangladesh University of Engineering and
Technology (BUET)
December, 2006
2Data Acquisition
- As data acquisition or data input of
geospatial data in digital format is most
expensive (about 80 of the total GIS project
cost) and procedures are time consuming in GIS,
the data sources for data acquisitions should be
carefully selected for specific purposes.
3Required Data Sources for GIS
- Analog mapsTopographic maps with contours and
other terrain features and thematic maps with
respect to defined object classes are digitized
by digitizers manually or by scanners
semi-automatically. - Aerial photographsAnalytical or digital
photogrammetry is rather expensive but the best
method for updating - Satellite imageSatellite images or data are
available for land use classification, digital
elevation model (DEM), updating highway network
etc. - Ground survey with GPSTotal station together
with GPS (Global Positioning System) will
modernize the ground survey. - Reports and publicationsSocial economic data are
usually listed in the reports of statistics and
census with respect to administration units.
4Compare data acquisition methods
5Digitizers for Vector Data Input
- The digitizing operation
- Step 1 affixed a map to a digitizing table.
- Step 2 add control points or tics at four
corners. - Step 3 digitize map contents according to the
map layers - Step 4 editing errors and clean the dataset
- Step 5 convert from digitizer coordinates to
map coordinates to store in a spatial database.
Tablet digitizers with a free cursor connected
with a personal computer are the most common
device for digitizing spatial features with the
planimetric coordinates from analog maps.
6Major problems of map digitization
- The map will stretch or shrink day by day which
makes the newly digitized points slightly off
from the previous points. - The map itself has errors.
- Discrepancies across neighboring map sheets will
produce disconnectivity.
7Selecting a digitizing technique
8Scanners for Raster Data Input
- Scanner are used to convert from analog maps or
photographs to digital image data in raster
format. - Mechanical ScannerIt is called drum scanner
since a map or an image placed on a drum is
digitized mechanically with rotation of the drum
and shift of the sensor. It is accurate but slow.
- Video CameraVideo camera with CRT (cathode ray
tube) is often used to digitize a small part of
map of firm. This is not very accurate but cheap.
- CCD CameraArea CCD camera (called digital still
camera) instead of video camera will be also
convenient to acquire digital image data. It is
more stable and accurate than video camera. - CCD ScannerFlat bed type or roll feed type
scanner with linear CCD (charge coupled device)
is now commonly used to digitize analog maps in
raster format, either in mono-tone or color mode.
It is accurate but expensive.
9Major Types of Scanner
10Performance of major scanners
11I/O of scanning process
(a) original document in black (with scanner
resolution in green)
(b) scanned document in gray scale pixel
(0black, 255 white)
12Digital Mapping by Aerial Photogrammetry
- Analytical PhotogrammetryThough computer systems
are used for aerial triangulation, measuring map
data, editing and output with pen plotter, a
stereo pair of analog films are set up in a
stereo plotter and the operator will manually
read terrain features through stereo
photogrammetric plotter called analytical
plotter. - Digital PhotogrammetryIn digital photogrammetry,
aerial films are converted into digital image
data with high resolution (5-25mm). Digital
elevation model (DEM) is automatically generated
with stereo matching using digital
photogrammetric workstation.
13- Procedures
- of
- Aerial
- Phtogrammetry
14Remote Sensing with Satellite Imagery
- Satellite remote sensing is a modern technology
to obtain digital image data of the terrain
surface in the electro-magnetic region of
visible, infrared and microwave. - Multi-spectral bands including visible,
near-infrared and/or thermal infrared are most
commonly used for production of land use map,
soil map, geological map, agricultureal map,
forest map etc. at the scale of 150,000
250,000. - A lot of earth observation satellites for
example landsat, SPOT, ERS-1, JERS-1, IRS,
Radarsat etc. are available.
15Earth Observation Satellites
16High Resolution Satellites
17Advanced Technologies for Primary Data
Acquisition
- Following advanced technologies will be
useful for future GIS. - Electronic Plane Surveying SystemAn integrated
system of total station with automated tracking
function, kinematics global positioning system
(GPS) and a pen computer will replace the
conventional plane surveying. - Mobile Mapping SystemDifferent sensors such as
GPS, INS (inertia navigation system), more than
two digital cameras, voice recorder etc. are
fixed on a vehicle in order to map objects in
close range. - Laser ScannerAirborne laser scanner together
with GPS and INS will measure directly the
terrain releif or DEM with the height accuracy of
10 cm up to the altitude of 1,000 m. - SAR InterferometerSAR (synthetic apperture
radar) inter-ferometry is a new technology to
produce DEM automatically by special
interferometric processing of a pair of SAR
images.
18Advanced Technologies
19Advanced Technologies (contd..)
20(No Transcript)
21Rasterization
- Conversion between raster and vector data is
very useful in practical applications of GIS. - Rasterization refers to conversion from vector to
raster data. - Raster format is more convennient to produce
color coded polygon maps such as color coded land
use map, while map digitizing in vector format is
more easier to trace only the boundary. - Rasterization is also useful to integrate GIS
with remote sensing becaues remote sensing images
are in raster format.
22Conversion Vector to Raster
- trapezoid area can be applied to convert
vectorized polygon to rasterized polygon with
grid cells
23Vectorization
- Vectorization refers to conversion from raster
to vector data, which is often called raster
vector conversion.
24Raster Vector Conversion
- Schematic of the raster vector conversion by
which left and right polygons are identified