Remote Sensing Presentation
Remote Sensing Presentation
Remote Sensing Presentation
Lecture 1
acquiring,
processing, and
interpreting
images and related data that are obtained from ground-based, air-or space-borne
instruments that record the interaction between matter (target) and electromagnetic
radiation.
Remote Sensing: using electromagnetic spectrum to image the land, ocean, and
atmosphere.
principles and techniques for data collection and the interaction of electromagnetic energy
with the Earth's surface
some application examples
also you will get familiar with ENVI, an image processing software.
Electromagnetic Spectrum
Source: http://oea.larc.nasa.gov/PAIS/DIAL.html
average shrub
average grass
average soil
0.12
-1
-1
Radiance (Wm nm sr )
0.14
-2
0.1
0.08
0.06
0.04
0.02
0
250
500
750
1000
123 4
1250
1500
1750
Wavelength (nm)
5
2000
2250
2500
2250
2500
0.6
average shrub
0.5
average grass
average soil
Reflectance
What we
measure in
remote
sensing?
0.16
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0
250
500
750
1000
1250
1500
Wavelength (nm)
1750
2000
http://www.asdi.com/
Solar radiation
Many more:
Temperature
Soil moisture
Mineral and rock types
Rainfall
Snow cover, snow depth or snow water equivalent
Vegetation type and biomass
Sea ice properties (concentration, thickness, extent, area)
Elevation and change
Aerosol, gas types and concentration
You might name a few more?
Ground-based
Airplane-based
Satellite-based
NASA
Research
Spacecraft
Busy Traffic
Data acquisition
Carbon
Management
Public Health
Energy
Management
Aviation
Water
Management
Homeland
Security
Coastal
Management
Disaster
Management
Agricultural
Efficiency
Invasive Species
Ecological
Forecasting
Air Quality
Aerial photography is the original form of remote sensing (using visible spectrum) started
in 1909
Aerial photographic reconnaissance was widely used after 1915 in WWI.
Photogrammetric Engineering, the official monthly publication of the American Society of
Photogrammetry, was first published in 1934.
Color infrared photography began 1931, then was widely used in agriculture and forestry.
Development of radar (1930-1940).
During WWII, non-visible spectrum (infrared and radar) were used as tools in remote
sensing.
After the first man-made satellite (Sputnik 1) was launched on 4 October 1957 by Soviet
Union, remote sensing moved to outer space, ignited the Space Race within the Cold War.
The United States' Explorer 6 transmitted the first space photograph of the Earth in August
1959.
The first systematic meteorological satellite observation came with the launch of the
United States' TIROS 1 in 1960.
Landsat 1 (originally called the Earth Resources Technology Satellite or ERTS) was the
first satellite to collect data on the Earth's natural resources. It was launched on 23 July
1972.
Hyperspectral remote sensing emerged (1980s), widely used in mineral, oil, etc.
exploration.
Since then, a large number and advanced types of remote sensing systems have been
developed.
Aqua
NPP
NPOESS
Observation
In operation
Under
Development
In Formulation
Tech
Development
Terra
ACRIMsat
SORCE
SAGE III
AURA
Glory
NPOESS
NPP
Atmospheric Composition
UARS
AURA
NPOESS
TBD
NOAA/EUMETSAT
Tech
Landsat 7
Data Assim
* Canceled
flight mission;
gleaning
technology
for GOES-R
OSTM
LDCM
Operational NPOESS
GIFTS*
GOES
Tropo Winds
TBD
NCEP
Coriolis (2003)
WindSat
METOP (2006)
IASI/AMSU/MHS & AVHRR
CrIS/ATMS
VIIRS
OMPS
NWS/NCEP
GSFC/DAO
ECMWF
C3S
IDPS
NOAA
Real-time
User
UKMO
FNMOC
Meteo-France
BMRC-Australia
NWP
Forecasts
not changed (at its core, the primary work remains EDR
evaluation and related algorithm improvements for climate
science!)
15
NPP Goals
The NPP mission has two major goals:
To provide a continuation of the EOS record of climatequality observations after EOS Terra, Aqua, and Aura (i.e.,
it will extend key Earth system data records and/or climate
data records of equal or better quality and uncertainty in
comparison to those of the Terra, Aqua, and Aura sensors),
and
To provide risk reduction for JPSS instruments,
algorithms, ground data processing, archive, and
distribution prior to the launch of the first JPSS spacecraft
(but note that there are now plans to use NPP data
operationally)
16
NPOESS no more
ENVI/IDL: http://www.rsinc.com/
ERDAS Imagine: http://www.gis.leicageosystems.com/Products/Imagine/
PCI Geomatics: http://www.pci.on.ca/
ER Mapper: http://www.ermapper.com/
INTEGRAPH: http://imgs.intergraph.com/gimage/
IDRIS:
Ecognition: http://www.definiensimaging.com/ecognition/pro/40.htm
See5 and decision tree