Introduction to Remote Sensing

Similar documents
Outline Remote Sensing Defined Resolution Electromagnetic Energy (EMR) Types Interpretation Applications 2

Outline Remote Sensing Defined Resolution Electromagnetic Energy (EMR) Types Interpretation Applications

Introduction to Remote Sensing

Image interpretation. Aliens create Indian Head with an ipod? Badlands Guardian (CBC) This feature can be found 300 KMs SE of Calgary.

Interpreting land surface features. SWAC module 3

Image interpretation I and II

Aerial Photo Interpretation

An Introduction to Geomatics. Prepared by: Dr. Maher A. El-Hallaq خاص بطلبة مساق مقدمة في علم. Associate Professor of Surveying IUG

Module 4, Investigation 2: Log 1 What features do archaeologists look for on an image?

Blacksburg, VA July 24 th 30 th, 2010 Remote Sensing Page 1. A condensed overview. For our purposes

Sensors and Data Interpretation II. Michael Horswell

746A27 Remote Sensing and GIS

Overview. Introduction. Elements of Image Interpretation. LA502 Special Studies Remote Sensing

A (very) brief introduction to Remote Sensing: From satellites to maps!

Lecture 2. Electromagnetic radiation principles. Units, image resolutions.

FOR 474: Forest Inventory. FOR 474: Forest Inventory. Why do we Care About Forest Sampling?

CHARACTERISTICS OF REMOTELY SENSED IMAGERY. Spatial Resolution

Remote Sensing is the observation of the Earth from satellites or aircrafts.

Govt. Engineering College Jhalawar Model Question Paper Subject- Remote Sensing & GIS

Aerial photography and Remote Sensing. Bikini Atoll, 2013 (60 years after nuclear bomb testing)

INTRODUCTION TO REMOTE SENSING AND ITS APPLICATIONS

CHAPTER 5. Image Interpretation

Introduction to Remote Sensing

Viewing New Hampshire from Space

REMOTE SENSING. Topic 10 Fundamentals of Digital Multispectral Remote Sensing MULTISPECTRAL SCANNERS MULTISPECTRAL SCANNERS

Lecture 1 Introduction to Remote Sensing

Philpot & Philipson: Remote Sensing Fundamentals Color 6.1 W.D. Philpot, Cornell University, Fall 2012 W B = W (R + G) R = W (G + B)

WATCHING OVER OUR PLANET FROM SPACE

Int n r t o r d o u d c u ti t on o n to t o Remote Sensing

Chapter 1 Overview of imaging GIS

ACTIVE SENSORS RADAR

EE 529 Remote Sensing Techniques. Introduction

Important Missions. weather forecasting and monitoring communication navigation military earth resource observation LANDSAT SEASAT SPOT IRS

Aerial photography: Principles. Frame capture sensors: Analog film and digital cameras

Monitoring agricultural plantations with remote sensing imagery

Application of GIS to Fast Track Planning and Monitoring of Development Agenda

Abstract Quickbird Vs Aerial photos in identifying man-made objects

Introduction to Remote Sensing

AR M. Sc. (Rural Technology) II Semester Fundamental of Remote Sensing Model Paper

Remote Sensing Platforms

The Elements of Art: Photography Edition. Directions: Copy the notes in red. The notes in blue are art terms for the back of your handout.

INTRODUCTORY REMOTE SENSING. Geob 373

Remote sensing in archaeology from optical to lidar. Krištof Oštir ModeLTER Scientific Research Centre of the Slovenian Academy of Sciences and Arts

Introduction to Remote Sensing Fundamentals of Satellite Remote Sensing. Mads Olander Rasmussen

University of Wisconsin-Madison, Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies September 2, 2014

9/12/2011. Training Course Remote Sensing Basic Theory & Image Processing Methods September 2011

earthobservation.wordpress.com

Sommersemester Prof. Dr. Christoph Kleinn Institut für Waldinventur und Waldwachstum Arbeitsbereich Fernerkundung und Waldinventur.

Introduction To Remote Sensing

who can combine geographic information systems with satellite data are in demand in a variety of disciplines.

For a long time I limited myself to one color as a form of discipline. Pablo Picasso. Color Image Processing

GIS Data Collection. Remote Sensing

Chapter 8. Remote sensing

Digital Image Processing - A Remote Sensing Perspective

RGB colours: Display onscreen = RGB

Exploring the Earth with Remote Sensing: Tucson

Introduction to Remote Sensing

NRS 415 Remote Sensing of Environment

SFR 406 Spring 2015 Lecture 7 Notes Film Types and Filters

Contents Remote Sensing for Studying Earth Surface and Changes

Remote Sensing. The following figure is grey scale display of SPOT Panchromatic without stretching.

Remote Sensing Platforms

First Exam: New Date. 7 Geographers Tools: Gathering Information. Photographs and Imagery REMOTE SENSING 2/23/2018. Friday, March 2, 2018.

The Elements and Principles of Design. The Building Blocks of Art

Dirty REMOTE SENSING Week 2 Interpreation

How to capture the best HDR shots.

Elements of Art Principles of Organization

Photogrammetry. Lecture 4 September 7, 2005

First Exam: Thurs., Sept 28

ENMAP RADIOMETRIC INFLIGHT CALIBRATION, POST-LAUNCH PRODUCT VALIDATION, AND INSTRUMENT CHARACTERIZATION ACTIVITIES

The (False) Color World

Introduction Active microwave Radar

Remote Sensing for Rangeland Applications

CHAPTER 8 AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHS

Outline for today. Geography 411/611 Remote sensing: Principles and Applications. Remote sensing: RS for biogeochemical cycles

Preparing Remote Sensing Data for Natural Resources Mapping (image enhancement, rectifications )

Mod. 2 p. 1. Prof. Dr. Christoph Kleinn Institut für Waldinventur und Waldwachstum Arbeitsbereich Fernerkundung und Waldinventur

Digital Image Processing. Lecture # 8 Color Processing

COMPARISON OF INFORMATION CONTENTS OF HIGH RESOLUTION SPACE IMAGES

Application of Remote Sensing in the Monitoring of Marine pollution. By Atif Shahzad Institute of Environmental Studies University of Karachi

Sample Copy. Not For Distribution.

Introduction to Remote Sensing. Electromagnetic Energy. Data From Wave Phenomena. Electromagnetic Radiation (EMR) Electromagnetic Energy

Chapter 1. Introduction

CHARACTERISTICS OF REMOTELY SENSED IMAGERY. Radiometric Resolution

FOR 353: Air Photo Interpretation and Photogrammetry. Lecture 2. Electromagnetic Energy/Camera and Film characteristics

LAB 2: AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY AND PHOTOGRAMMETRY PART 1: INTERPRETATION OF AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY

First Exam. Geographers Tools: Gathering Information. Photographs and Imagery. SPIN 2 Image of Downtown Atlanta, GA 1995 REMOTE SENSING 9/19/2016

SATELLITE OCEANOGRAPHY

Remote Sensing for Fire Management. FOR 435: Remote Sensing for Fire Management

USE OF DIGITAL AERIAL IMAGES TO DETECT DAMAGES DUE TO EARTHQUAKES

Year 9 Summer Photography Assignment.

Content Reviewer (CR) Swati Katiyar Senior Research Fellow, Birla Institute of Scientific Research, Jaipur Language Editor (LE)

University of Kota Kota

What is Photogrammetry

RADAR (RAdio Detection And Ranging)

Geo/SAT 2 INTRODUCTION TO REMOTE SENSING

Introduction to Remote Sensing Part 1

Side & Subdued Lighting

REMOTE SENSING WITH DRONES. YNCenter Video Conference Chang Cao

9/19/16. A Closer Look. Danae Wolfe. What We ll Cover. Basics of photography & your camera. Technical. Macro & close-up techniques.

Transcription:

Introduction to Remote Sensing 1

Outline Remote Sensing Defined Electromagnetic Energy (EMR) Resolution Interpretation 2

Remote Sensing Defined Remote Sensing is: The art and science of obtaining information about an object without being in direct contact with the object (Jensen 2000). There is a medium of transmission involved. 3

Remote Sensing Defined Remote Sensing: the collection of information about Earth surfaces and phenomena using sensors not in physical contact with the surfaces and phenomena of interest. We will focus on data collected from an overhead perspective via transmission of electromagnetic radiation. 4

Remote Sensing Defined Remote Sensing Includes: A) The mission plan and choice of sensors; B) The reception, recording, and processing of the signal data; and C) The analysis of the resultant data. 5

6

Electromagnetic Spectrum 7

8

9

10

Resolution All remote sensing systems have four types of resolution: Spatial Spectral Temporal Radiometric 11

Resolution 12

Resolution 13

Spatial Resolution High vs. Low? 14

Resolution 15

Resolution 16

Spectral Resolution 17

Resolution 18

Radiometric Resolution 6-bit range 0 63 8-bit range 0 255 10-bit range 0 1023 19

Resolution 20

Temporal Resolution July 2 July 18 August 3 16 days Time 11 days July 1 July 12 July 23 August 3 21

22 22

Aerial Photos Balloon photography (1858) Pigeon cameras (1903) Kite photography (1890) Aircraft (WWI and WWII) Space (1947) Images: Jensen (2000) 23

Word War I: Air photos for reconnaisance from fighter planes and pigeons Balloons and kites were easy to shoot down, but pigeons were not. Small light weight cameras were attached to the birds and a timer was set to take pictures ever 30 seconds as it flew 24

Oblique photos from mountain peaks: Banff 25

Photogrammetry: from photos" Photo interpretation: objects" "the science of obtaining reliable measurements "the identification and extraction of meaning of Photogrammetry needs a minimum 5 known point locations per photo 26

27

28

29

Elements of Image Interpretation Shape: Many natural and human-made features have unique shapes. Often used are adjectives like linear, curvilinear, circular, elliptical, radial, square, rectangular, triangular, hexagonal, star, elongated, and amorphous. 30

Shape: the form of an object on an air photo helps to identify the object. Regular uniform shapes often indicate a human involvement; 31

32

33

Size: a measure of the object's surface area (e.g. single-lane vs. multi-lane highways); Time: temporal characteristics of a series of photographs can be helpful in determining the historical change of an area (e.g. looking at a series of photos of a city taken in different years can help determine the growth of suburban neighbourhoods; 34

Pattern: Pattern is the spatial arrangement of objects on the landscape. General descriptions include random and systematic; natural and human-made. More specific descriptions include circular, oval, curvilinear, linear, radiating, rectangular, etc. 35

Elements of Image Interpretation Shadow: Shadow reduction is of concern in remote sensing because shadows tend to obscure objects that might otherwise be detected. However, the shadow cast by an object may be the only real clue to its identity. Shadows can also provide information on the height of an object either qualitatively or quantitatively. 36

Shadow Jensen (2000) 37

Elements of Image Interpretation Tone and Color: A band of EMR recorded by a remote sensing instrument can be displayed on an image in shades of gray ranging from black to white. These shades are called tones, and can be qualitatively referred to as dark, light, or intermediate (humans can see 40-50 tones). Tone is related to the amount of light reflected from the scene in a specific wavelength interval (band). 38

Tone/Colour: the colour characteristics of an object, relative to other objects in the photo (e.g. sand has a bright tone, while water usually has a dark tone; tree species can be determined by the colour of their leaves at certain times of the year); Monochrome (panchromatic) air photos are used more frequently as colour photography costs twice as much. 39

Tone and Color Jensen (2000) 40

Elements of Image Interpretation Texture: Texture refers to the arrangement of tone or color in an image. Useful because Earth features that exhibit similar tones often exhibit different textures. Adjectives include smooth (uniform, homogeneous), intermediate, and rough (coarse, heterogeneous). 41

Texture Jensen (2000) 42

43

44

Texture: the physical characteristics of an object affect texture (e.g. calm water has a smooth texture; a forest canopy has a rough texture); 45

Elements of Image Interpretation Height and Depth: As discussed, shadows can often offer clues to the height of objects. In turn, relative heights can be used to interpret objects. In a similar fashion, relative depths can often be interpreted. Descriptions include tall, intermediate, and short; deep, intermediate, and shallow. 46

Height and Depth 47

48

Elements of Image Interpretation Association: This is very important when trying to interpret an object or activity. Association refers to the fact that certain features and activities are almost always related to the presence of certain other features and activities. 49

Association/Site: associating the presence of one object with another, or relating it to its environment, can help identify the object (e.g. industrial buildings often have access to railway sidings; 50

Association Jensen (2000) 51

Thank You 52