Active and Passive Microwave Remote Sensing

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Active and Passive Microwave Remote Sensing Passive remote sensing system record EMR that was reflected (e.g., blue, green, red, and near IR) or emitted (e.g., thermal IR) from the surface of the Earth. Atmosphere Atmospheric blinds: The wavelength which are Blocked by the atmosphere. Atmospheric windows: The wavelength which can pass through the atmosphere. 1

Active and Passive Microwave Remote Sensing Active remote sensing systems are not dependent on the Sun's EMR or the thermal properties of the Earth. Active remote sensors create their own electromagnetic energy that: 1. is transmitted from the sensor toward the terrain (and is largely unaffected by the atmosphere), 2. interacts with the terrain producing a backscatter of energy, and 3. is recorded by the remote sensor's receiver. The most widely used active remote sensing systems include: Active microwave (RADAR= RAdio Detection and Ranging), which is based on the transmission of long-wavelength microwave (e.g., 3-25 cm) through the atmosphere and then recording the amount of energy backscattered from the terrain. The beginning of the RADAR technology was using radio waves. Although radar systems now use microwave wavelength energy almost exclusively instead of radio wave, the acronym was never changed. 2

LIDAR (LIght Detection And Ranging), which is based on the transmission of relatively shortwavelength laser light (e.g., 0.90 m) and then recording the amount of light backscattered from the terrain; SONAR (SOund NAvigation Ranging), which is based on the transmission of sound waves through a water column and then recording the amount of energy backscattered from the bottom or from objects within the water column. 3

RADAR (RAdio Detection and Ranging) The ranging capability is achieved by measuring the time delay from the time a signal is transmitted to the terrain until its echo is received. Radar is capable of detecting frequency and polarization shifts. Because the sensor transmitted a signal of known wavelength, it is possible to compare the received signal with the transmitted signal. From such comparisons imaging radar detects changes in frequency that form the basis of capabilities not possible with other sensors. 4

Brief History of RADAR 1922, Taylor and Young tested radio transmission cross the Anacostia River near Washington D.C. 1935, Young and Taylor combined the antenna transmitter and receiver in the same instrument. Late 1936, Experimental RADAR were working in the U.S., Great Britain, Germany, and the Soviet Union. 1940, Plane-The circularly scanning Doppler radar (that we watch everyday during TV weather updates to identify the geographic locations of storms) 1950s, Military began using side-looking airborne radar (SLAR or SLR) 1960s, synthetic aperture radar (SAR) 1970s and 1980s, NASA launched SARs, SEASAT, Shuttle-Imaging Radar (SIR) 1990s, RADARSAT 5

Advantages: Pass through cloud, precipitation, tree canopy, dry surface deposits, snow All weather, day-and-night imaging capacity 6

Side-Looking (Airborne) Radar (SLAR or SLR) Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) The disadvantage of real-aperture radar is that its resolution is limited by antenna length. SAR produce a very long antenna synthetically or artificially by using the forward motion of the platform to carry a relatively short real antenna to successive position along the flight line. These successive portions are treated electronically as an individual elements of the same antenna. Therefore the resolution is improved. 7

Radar Measurements Radar Measurements 8

Wavelength and Penetration of Canopy The longer the microwave wavelength, the greater the penetration of vegetation canopy. Wavelength and Penetration of Canopy The longer the microwave wavelength, the greater the penetration of vegetation canopy. 9

10

Imaging Radar Applications Environmental Monitoring Vegetation mapping Monitoring vegetation regrowth, timber yields Detecting flooding underneath canopy, flood plain mapping Assessing environmental damage to vegetation Hydrology Soil moisture maps and vegetation water content monitoring Snow cover and wetness maps Measuring rain-fall rates in tropical storms Oceanography Monitoring and routing ship traffic Detection oil slicks (natural and man-made) Measuring surface current speeds Sea ice type and monitoring for directing ice-breakers LIDAR (LIght Detection And Ranging) LiDAR is a rapidly emerging technology for collecting high resolution elevation data through active remote sensing. determining the shape of the ground surface plus natural and man-made features. Buildings, trees and power lines are individually discernible features. This data is digital and is directly processed to produce detailed bare earth DEMs at vertical accuracies of 0.15 meters to 1 meter. Derived products include contour maps, slope/aspect, three-dimensional topographic images, virtual reality visualizations and more. 11

LiDAR: The Basics Distance Measured by Time Difference Records > 200k Points Per Second Ability to Collect Multiple Returns for Each Pulse Christopher Damon LiDAR Point Clouds: The Value of Multiple Returns First Return Highest feature on landscape Middle Returns Vegetation structure Last Return Generally bare earth Christopher Damon 12

Evaluation Data: Source Matters Data accuracy/resolution important Christopher Damon Evaluation Data: Source Matters GTOPO 30 1km SRTM 90m USGS 30m LiDAR 3m Gesch, 2009 Christopher Damon 13

Evaluation Data: Digital Elevation Models Source: USGS 30m (~98ft) Source: LiDAR 0.6m (~2ft) Christopher Damon Terminology: DSM vs. DEM Digital Elevation Model Digital Surface Model 14

2011 LiDAR: A Common Foundation Northeast LiDAR Initiative USGS initiative to improve NED ARRA Funds with state plus-up RI Environmental Monitoring Collaborative PhotoScience awarded contract Winter 2010 Spring 2011 1,553 Tiles 258 Gb Data Collection Specifications Horizontal Nominal Post Spacing (NPS) 1 meters NAD83 UTM 19N Vertical Root Mean Square Error (RMSEz) 15cm NAVD88 (GEOID99) Fundamental vertical accuracy 29.4cm @ 95% C.L. in open terrain 2-Foot contours (NSSDA Standards) Christopher Damon 15

Exploring the Data: Point Clouds Point Cloud Classification Height Normalized Height LAS File Information Elevation Intensity Return # # of Returns Classification Quick Terrain Modeler Visualization Orthophoto RGB Exploring the Data: Point Clouds Quick Terrain Modeler Visualization 16

Exploring the Data: Surface Models Height With Contours Orthophoto Drape Quick Terrain Modeler Visualization LiDAR LIDAR data can be integrated with other data sets, including orthophotos, multispectral, hyperspectral and panchromatic imagery. LIDAR is combined with GIS data and other surveying information to generate complex geomorphic-structure mapping products, building renderings, advanced three dimensional modeling/earthworks and many more high quality mapping products. 17