Title: Chapter 10 Global Effects
1Chapter 10Global Effects Remote Sensing and
GIS
Lecture 24 HNRT 228 Spring 2014 Energy and the
Environment Adapted from Fiorentino / Rutgers U.
2Chapter 10 Overview
- Earth as a planet
- The polar regions and sea ice effects
- The stratospheric ozone situation
- Another look at greenhouse gasses
- Climate change
- Global warming
- Remote Sensing
- Geographic Information Systems
- Geomatics
3iClicker Question
- Which of the following layers of the atmosphere
is highest above the surface of the Earth? - A Troposphere
- B Stratosphere
- C Thermosphere
- D Mesosphere
- E Ozone Layer
4iClicker Question
- What is the primary ingredient of the Earth's
atmosphere? - A Nitrogen
- B Oxygen
- C Nitrogen and oxygen in equal parts
- D Hydrogen
- E Carbon dioxide
5iClicker Question
- In what part of the atmosphere does weather
occur? - A Hydrosphere
- B Stratosphere
- C Ionosphere
- D Troposphere
- E All of the above
6iClicker Question
- How rapidly a planet loses its atmosphere depends
on the planet's - I. mass
- II. atmospheric composition
- III. temperature
- IV. rotation period
- A I II
- B III IV
- C I, II, III
- D II, III, IV
- E I, II, III, IV
7iClicker Question
- The presence of Earths magnetic field is a good
indication that - A there is a large amount of magnetic material
buried near the North Pole. - B there is a quantity of liquid metal swirling
around in the Earth's core. - C the Earth is composed largely of iron.
- D the Earth is completely solid.
- E there are condensed gasses in the core of the
Earth.
8iClicker Question
The dinosaurs were most likely wiped out by A
disease B hunting to extinction by cavemen C a
giant meteor impact D the close passage of
another star
9iClicker Question
A leading cause of Global Warming is A
Increased soot (smog) in the atmosphere. B
Increased carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. C
The Earth is getting closer to the sun. D The
luminosity of the sun is steadily increasing.
10iClicker Question
The greenhouse gas effect would not occur
if A the Earth had no atmosphere. B the amount
of carbon dioxide doubled. C we got rid of all
the forests. D the Earth didnt have an ocean.
11iClicker Question
Sunlight absorbed by the Earths surface is
reemitted in the form of? A radio waves B
infrared radiation C visible radiation D
ultraviolet radiation E X-ray radiation
12Geomatics refers to earth (geo) measuring
(matics) technologiesthe discipline of
gathering, storing, processing, and delivering of
geographic information. This broad term applies
both to science and technology, and integrates
the following more specific disciplines and
technologies geodesy, surveying, mapping,
positioning, navigation, cartography, remote
sensing, photogrammetry, geographic information
systems, global positioning systems source
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geomatics
Organize and solve problems involving spatial
analysis still typically just called GIS
(geographic information systems)
13Data and Information
- To some Information is not Data
- Data needs to be transformed into information
(and vice versa) - Information can be defined as an answer to a
question using data or - Information is what we know that must be
organized into data for use in analysis - With GIS we transform information into data
14Geomatics or More Commonly GISRemote Sensing
Image Process Air Photo Satellite Images
Photogrammetry
Raster GIS Vector GIS 3D
Modeling GPS
GIS
Visualization Networking Databases
Internet
15Geomatics has application in
- Regional and Urban Planning
- Defense and Intelligence
- Forestry
- Archaeology
- Natural resource management
- Water/soils/agriculture
- Telecommunications
- Emergency Response
- ANY problem that has a spatial aspect
- ANY scale from the local to the global
- Policy
- Transportation
- Demography
- Global environment
- Wildlife management
- Business
Applied Geography, in the form of maps spatial
information has served discovery, planning,
cooperation conflict for at least the past 3000
years Bolstad
16FIVE major functions Inherent to Geomatics
17Primary Disciplines of Geomatics
- Geographic Information Systems (GIS)
- Remote Sensing
- Air photo
- Satellite imagery
- Global Navigation Satellite Systems (GNSS)
- More commonly called GPS for Global Positioning
Satellite System
18Geographic Information System
a computer based system to aid in the
collection, maintenance, storage, analysis,
output, and distribution of spatial data and
information
19Why GIS?
- Expanded capabilities - do it with a geographic
twist - Improved efficiency - reduce duration of analysis
10-fold or more
20What is GIS?
- Paper, pencil, and person can be a GIS
21Why computerize manual methods?
Synthesis of sources Analytical power Measure
distance, density, area Overlay and
buffer Adjacency and proximity Vicinity
(neighborhood) Networks Inter-visibility Interoper
ability Flexibility Repeatability Output Quality
22Tools of GIS
23Geographic
- Data describing objects from the real world in
terms of - Position (x,y in some coordinate system)
- Spatial relationships
- Streets may be connected
- There is a distance between two points
- Areas overlap, be adjacent or not touch
24Information
- Organized knowledge about locations facilitates
analysis and new knowledge - Predictable data schema
- compared to paper maps stored in different
rooms in different drawers, at different scales
and projections - (time consuming and sometimes impossible to
analyze)
25Systems
- Consistent storage in a database
- Retrieve and manipulate information in a
consistent manner - Flow of data can be documented
- Spatial data from a variety of sources, scales
and projections can be converted into one logical
structure allowing access and analysis using a
set of rules
26Abstracting the Real World
Abstraction of relevant phenomena and properties
Phenomena that Exist
Computer Representation
27GIS exists in an institutional context
Effective GIS use depends on a set of protocols
and an integration into the data collection,
analysis, decision, and action loop of an
organization
28GIS Data Examples
- If it can be mapped it can be entered into a GIS
- Pointsarcheological sites, trees, fire hydrants,
crime locations, cellular towers, etc. - Linesroads, streams, political boundary lines
- Polygonsarcheological sites, soils, geology,
vegetation cover, watersheds, political
subdivisions
29"GIS is simultaneously the telescope, the
microscope, the computer, and the Xerox machine
of regional analysis and synthesis of spatial
data." (Abler, 1988)
30GIS Data
TABULAR ATTRIBUTE DATA
SPATIALREFERENCE
31GIS Data
- Hydrology
- Soils
- Roads
- Elevation
- Land use / land cover
- (from satellite imagery or air photos)
- The landscape (in all its complexity)
Each type of data forms a data layer that is
geo-referenced to a common map projection and
datum
32REPRESENTATION AND DATA STRUCTURES
Most commondata models define thematic
layers Typically there is one layer for each
distinct theme
33GIS - The Concept of Layers
Assessment of Soil Erosion Hazard
DERIVED DATA
ANALYSIS
LAND DATA
Ownership Class
Slope
Hydrology
Erodability
Potential Soil Erosion
Runoff
Topography
Soils
Land Cover
Base Map
34 A Forest Area.
Delineated to make patches
Create Ranked Critical Areas
Overlaid with Species Data to
35TABULAR RELATIONSHIPS
36GIS operates On All Scales
37A GIS Schematic
Manipulate Analyze
Collect
Manage
Display
Spatial Processing System
MAP OUTPUTS
Composite Maps Perspective Maps Interpret
Maps Scaled Maps
Spatial Data Base
Non Spatial Resource Data Base
- Area
- Lengths
- Data Base
- Summaries
Data Base Management System
TABULAR AND STATISTICAL INFO
38GIS is Generic
- Regional and Urban Planning
- Defense and Intelligence
- Forestry
- Archaeology
- Natural resource management
- Water/soils/agriculture
- Telecommunications
- Emergency Response
- ANY problem that has a spatial aspect
- ANY scale from the local to the global
- Policy
- Transportation
- Demography
- Global environment
- Wildlife management
- Business
Applied Geography, in the form of maps spatial
information has served discovery, planning,
cooperation conflict for at least the past 3000
years Bolstad
39Some GIS Applications Areas
- Policy
- Education
- Cartography
- Hazards EMS, first responders
- Hydrology
- Land Resources
- Zoning
- Use value Taxation
- Transportation
- Environmental impact assessment
- Parks and forest management
- Planning
- Agriculture
- Soils management
- Marketing
- Global environmental issues
- Demographics
- Wildlife management
- Route selection
- Civil engineering
- Network analysis e.g. telecom
- Public health
- Toxic waste management
- Archaeology and history
- Police, fire, 911, emergency
- Oil and other toxic spills
- Landscape architecture
- Many, many others, and more to come
40Remote Sensing
- Remote sensing is the science and art of
obtaining information about an object, area, or
phenomenon through the analysis of data acquired
by a device that is not in contact with the
object, area, or phenomenon under
investigation. Lillesand Kiefer (1987)
41Remote Sensing Platforms
- Geostationary
- Polar orbit
- Manned space
- High altitude aircraft
- Jets
- low alt. aircraft
- Platforms
- In-situ/ground
30000 km
1000 km
300 km
90,000 ft
10-30,000 ft
500-10,000 ft
10-100 ft
0-5 ft
42- Air photos have been a major source of
information for making maps
43Air Photos
- High resolution
- Since 1930s (for change detection)
- Provide most cadastral, utility and
infrastructure data for GIS
44Precision Agriculture and Disease Detection
45Managing Nutrient Input/Run-off into Watersheds
46Satellite Imagery (temporal analysis)
Banda Aceh, Indonesia (source DigitalGlobe)
47The Nature of an Image
- A remotely sensed image is not considered a
photograph - An image is a rendition (or model) of target
features described through the use of spectral
reflectance - These reflectance values are stored in a
quantitative, numerical fashion in a manner
suitable for input to a computer
48the electromagnetic spectrum
- Note The EM spectrum is arbitrarily segmented
into major divisions - There are no natural breaks in the EM spectrum
- Humans created the separations for our own
convenience
49Electromagnetic Radiation
- Electromagnetic radiation (EM) is the signal
collected by most remote sensing instruments - The source of the energy varies depending on the
sensor characteristics - Most systems rely on the sun to generate all the
EM energy needed to image terrestrial surfaces
(passive sensors) - Other systems (active sensors), transmit energy
in a certain direction and record the portion
reflected back by features within the signal path
50Remote Sensing Topics
- Radiation Laws
- Light Interactions with Atmosphere
- Scatter, Absorption, Windows
- Interaction of Light with Surface
- Spectral signatures, reflection, transmission,
illumination - Land Observation Satellite Systems
- AVHRR, Landsat, MSS, TM, SPOT
- Digital Image Analysis vs. Photo Interpretation
51A Remote Sensing Schematic
Manipulate Analyze
Collect
Manage
Display
Spatial Processing System
MAP OUTPUTS
Composite Maps Perspective Maps Interpret
Maps Scaled Maps
Spatial Data Base
Non Spatial Resource Data Base
Data Base Summaries
Data Base Management System
52Change Detection
- 1982-1992 land use change 29,860 acres/year
- 1992-1995 land use change 56,640 acres/year
- total non-federal land developed
- 1982 27.7
- 1985 32.7
- 1992 34.4
- 1997 40.8
53Change Detection Mapping (time series)
54Where in the World am I?
- Unless clouds are in the way
- Stars have provided us with the ability to find
our location (method-dependant accuracy from 1 to
10 miles) and determine (night) time - Satellites provide superb location and time to a
very high degree of accuracy
55NAVSTAR GPS
- NAVigation Satellite Time And RangingGlobal
Positioning System - Developed by US Dept of Defense
- Satellite-based radio-navigation system using
timing and ranging measurements to accurately
determine locations on the earths surface - Provides worldwide, 24 hour, 3D coverage
- Freely available for civilian use
56How does GPS work?
- Control Segment
- Space Segment
- User Segment
57Three Segments make up the GPS system
Space Segment
User Segment
Control Segment
Colorado Springs
58GPS Applications
59.and Integration with Mobile-Collection Devices
Mobile device syncs with office-based
servers For data maintenance, data update, field
scouting
60Now GPS can be connected to most anything!
Pathfinder Watch
Sprayers, seeders, harvesters
Data loggers
Form factors Kenwood GPS (top Right) Automotive
GPS Garmin - Magellan TomTom
Transportation Boats Trucking Cabbies!?!?!
Pocket PCs
GPS Ready digital cameras/video
Mobile Phones
61Tablet pen based PC with Digital Ink
New GPS Technologies Concentrate on Portability,
Data Handling and GIS Workflow model.
62A GPS Schematic
Manipulate Analyze
Collect
Manage
Display
Spatial Processing System
Digitize Maps
MAP OUTPUTS
Digitize Classify Imagery
Composite Maps Perspective Maps Interpret
Maps Scaled Maps
Spatial Data Base
Non Spatial Resource Data Base
- Area
- Lengths
- Data Base
- Summaries
Input Existing Spatial Files
Data Base Management System
TABULAR AND STATISTICAL INFO
Input Tabular Data
63effective use of GIS depends on a set of
protocols and an integration into the data
collection, analysis, and action loop of an
organization,Bolstad