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RS midterm

remote sensing midterm

QuestionAnswer
What is the definition of RS? • measuring environmental variables or EM radiation without direct contact with the target • use of math + statistics based algorithms to extract valuable info from RS data
What technological components make photography possible? 1. light + color theory: light is made up of all colors; IR + UV radiation have effects without being visible 2. a recording instrument: first example was pinhole photography through the camera obscura
What are the advantages of RS? 1. does not disturb target when observed passively 2. can be programmed to collect data systematically, eliminating sampling bias 3. fundamental biophysical info under controlled conditions 4. accurate, cheap, frequently updated
What are the disadvantages of RS? 1. often oversold; cannot provide all the info for research 2. human error may be introduced when specifying instrument + mission parameters 3. always needs validation from other sources
What are passive RS systems? • systems that record naturally occurring EM radiation reflected or emitted from the terrain; ex. photography, multispectral scanning
What are active RS systems? • systems that supply energy to illuminate the scene then record radiant flux scattered back to the sensor; ex. microwave (radar), laser sensors
What are the seven steps of the general RS process? 1. energy source / illumination 2. radiation + atmosphere 3. interaction with target 4. sensor records energy 5. transmission, reception, processing 6. interpretation + analysis 7. application
What are the four resolutions of RS data? 1. spatial: size of FOV; ex. 10x10 m 2. spectral: bands that the sensor records; ex. thermal IR 3. temporal: how often sensor records data; ex. every 30 days 4. radiometric: sensitivity of detectors; ex. 16-bit
What is analog imagery? • hard-copy aerial photography / video data; cannot be processed after development • mathematically represented as range of values representing position + intensity
What is a pixel? • smallest picture element in an image, assigned a value + location
What is IFOV? • instantaneous field of view; ground area viewed by a sensor at a given instant
Major RS softwares: 1. ERDAS Imagine 2. ENVI/IDL 3. PCI EASY/PACE 4. ER Mapper 5. ARC/INFO GRID 6. ESRI ArcView (ArcGIS) Image Analyst
Major RS journals: 1. RS of Environment 2. ISPRS Journal of Photogrammetry + RS 3. Photogrammetric Engineering + RS 4. Geocarto International
What is the relationship between energy source and illumination? • the Sun is the original energy source for Earth, and it provides illumination • incoming solar radiation may be reflected or absorbed by clouds, Earth's surface, water vapor, dust, ozone, etc.
What are EM waves and how do they travel? • EM waves are transverse waves made by vibrating electric charges • they travel through space as electric + magnetic fields both perpendicular to the wave's direction
What are the types of EM radiation? • radio, microwave, infrared, visible (red --> violet), ultraviolet, x-ray, gamma rays
What are the three types of energy transfer? 1. conduction: heat transfer through direct contact 2. convection: heat transfer through circulating fluids (liquids + gases) 3. radiation: energy transfer through EM waves
Describe refraction: • bending of light when it passes from one medium to another of a different density • measure of a substance's optical density
Describe scattering: • reflection of EM energy by atmospheric particles • does not affect wavelength or intensity
Describe absorption: • when radiant energy is absorbed + converted into other energy forms
Describe reflection: • when radiant energy "bounces" off a surface • specular reflection: smooth surface, waves remain parallel • diffuse reflection: rough surface, waves reflect in many directions
What is Raleigh scattering? • occurs 2-8 km high in the atmosphere, where particle diameter is much smaller than EM wavelength • blue skies: radiation with shorter wavelength (blue + purple) scatters more easily
What is Mie scattering? • occurs ~4 km high in the atmosphere, where particle diameter is roughly equal to EM wavelength • pollen, dust, smoke, water, etc.
What is nonselective scattering? • occurs where particle diameter is larger than EM wavelength • all wavelengths scattered equally --> haze effect, reduced spatial detail + image contrast
What are atmospheric windows, and what is their use? • regions of the EM spectrum that pass through Earth's atmosphere with little absorption or scattering • different windows allow for the use of specific sensors operating at those ranges
What are the three terrain energy-matter interactions? 1. reflection: bounces off terrain 2. absorption: absorbed by terrain 3. transmission: travels through terrain • R + A + T = 100%
What energy-matter interactions are introduced at the sensor, and what errors are associated with those? • ideally: recorded radiance is true measure of that leaving target terrain within IFOV at specific angle • other radiation can enter IFOV and cause noise • different radiation interacts uniquely with materials in film cameras + sensors
What is a vantage point? • a position / standpoint from which a target is viewed / considered
What is a filter? • a material that selectively absorbs some wavelengths of light reflected from the target while letting the rest of the light through to the camera
What is a polarized filter? • a filter that absorbs sunlight incoming to the sensor from specific angles
What is film? • light-sensitive layer reacts to form image when exposed to light; must be developed • light-sensitive emulsion layer, supportive base material, anti-halation layer (prevent reflection back through emulsion)
Explain the relationship between focal plane + focal length: • plane: area where film is held flat during exposure • length: mm from lens optical center to focal point • when subject is in focus, focal point lies on the focal plane • fixed focal plane: features smaller at shorter focal length
Explain wide-angle cameras: • a camera with a focal length less then 35 mm; creates a wider FOV
What is a vertical photograph + the associated optical axis threshold? • vertical photos are taken directly above the target; best for mapping + measurements • camera's optical axis must be within 3 degrees away from direct vertical from target
What is the difference between low + high oblique photographs? • oblique: photo taken from an angle; best for 3D perspective • low: horizon not shown in the photo • high: horizon shown in the photo
What are the advantages of vertical imagery? 1. essentially constant scale 2. easy, accurate measurements 3. can be used as a map when combined with grids + marginal data 4. easier interpretation, especially stereography
What are the advantages of oblique imagery? 1. much larger area covered in one photo (assuming constant sensor + altitude) 2. view may be more familiar to interpreter 3. some objects are seen that were invisible vertically
Describe frame cameras: • takes a single image of a large area using an array of detectors simultaneously
Describe scanners: • uses single detector to sweep across terrain, builds large image from many smaller ones
Describe linear arrays: • push broom: takes long images one after the other, no rotating mirror • whisk broom: uses rotating mirror to sweep across terrain + take many small images, similar to a scanner
Describe hyperspectral data arrays: • takes long images with no rotating mirror similar to push broom • captures image across many small, continuous spectral bands simultaneously to make a thick cube of data
What is additive color theory? • based on mixing light; used to display images on monitors
What is subtractive color theory? • based on mixing pigments; used when working with filters
Describe black + white film: • panchromatic sensitive layer
Describe black + white infrared film: • near-infrared sensitive layer
Describe normal color film: • blue sensitive layer - yellow filter - green sensitive layer - red sensitive layer
Describe color-infrared film: • near-infrared sensitive layer - green sensitive layer - red sensitive layer
What is the impact of time of day on aerial photography mission planning? • affects illumination, quality, shadows, hot spots • ideal: within 2 hours of solar noon, Sun 30-52 deg above horizon • low sun angle may be preferred to enhance terrain representation
What is the impact of weather on aerial photography mission planning? • affects scattering + absorption (water vapor), flight line (drift from wind), haze (smog + clouds) • ideal: few days after passage of frontal system • maybe before system if low wind + humidity
What is the impact of flightline layout on aerial photography mission planning? • info needed: photo + base map scale, coordinates of study area corners, area size, forward overlap + sidelap, film + camera • calculations: altitude, # of flightlines, distance between flightlines + exposures, # of exposures
What is aerial photographic interpretation? • examining images to identify objects + judge significance; visually or through computer processing • provides 3D depth perception, knowledge of non-visible spectrums, historical records + change detection
What are the nine elements of image interpretation? 1. x,y location 2. tone + color 3. size 4. shape 5. texture 6. pattern 7. shadow 8. site 9. association
Describe the element x,y location: • link to other contextual info
Describe the element tone + color: • average brightness of an area (tone = B+W) / dominant color • specular vs. diffuse reflection
Describe the element size: • dimensions of a feature, ex. length + area • relative size: compare target with surroundings • absolute size: use an aerial image to derive measurements
Describe the element shape: • outline of a feature, dependent on perspective • scale effect: scale of an uncorrected overhead image is not consistent across the image
Describe the element texture: • variation in tone / apparent roughness caused by shadows of terrain irregularities
Describe the element pattern: • distinctive arrangement of features
Describe the element shadow: • outline of an object projected onto a flat surface opposite the light source • depends on object, angle of illumination, perspective, slope of ground surface
Describe the element site: • position with respect to topography, drainage, function • ex. power plants placed by water source for cooling
Describe the element association: • relationships between features • ex. large parking lot - shopping mall
What is georeferencing? • aligning geographic data to known coordinate system so it can be viewed + applied + analyzed with other geographical data • allows for accurate direction + distance + area measurements
What are the six commonly used georeferencing systems? 1. place names 2. postal addresses + codes 3. linear referencing 4. cadastral maps 5. latitude + longitude 6. projections + coordinates
Explain georeferencing by place names: • most common everyday form • names may be universally recognized, work on different scales, and may also fade with time
Explain georeferencing by postal addresses + codes: • fails in rural areas, for natural features, where addresses are not sequential
Explain georeferencing by linear referencing: • roads, streets, rails, rivers • measure distance from reference point, often an intersection
Explain georeferencing by cadastral maps: • cadastral maps: land ownership records maintained for taxing + public record • only accessible to local officials with ID codes for each land parcel
Explain georeferencing by latitude + longitude: • most comprehensive, powerful, exact • well-defined, supports other spatial analysis
What are latitude lines? • parallel lines measured north + south of the Equator
What are longitude lines? • parallel lines called meridians measured east + west of the Prime Meridian
Explain georeferencing by projections + coordinates: • project Earth's surface onto a plane for easier measuring, but will distort dimensions in some way
Describe cylindrical map projections: • conformal: preserve small-scale angles + shapes but distort overall scale of image • most well-known is Mercator: lat + long perpendicular, but high lat very enlarged; cylinder placed around equator
Describe conical map projections: • lat appear as arcs of circles, long extend straight from the poles • Lambert Conformal Conic Projection: commonly used to map north America
Describe azimuthal / planar map projections: • surface projected straight onto flat surface
What is the Universal Transverse Mercator Projection? • cylinder placed around poles (vs. equator in original Mercator) • maps a large north-south region with low distortion • 60 zones, each 6 deg long wide, max distortion 0.04%
Why does RS need geometric correction? • individual pixels must must be in their correct planimetric (x,y) locations • only geometrically correct images give accurate distance + polygon area, direction info
What are GCPs? • ground control points: can be both identified in imagery + located on a map, both coordinates required for rectification • paired coordinates are modeled --> geometric transformation coefficients to rectify data
What are affine transformations? • maintain relative arrangement of points + straightness of lines, not distances + angles
Describe first-order affine transformations: • linear; fits plane to data to rectify uniform distortions (translation, scale, rotation) in small areas
Describe second-order + third-order affine transformations: • bend + curve image to best match ground features
What are the basic steps of the iterative geometric correction process? 1. use all GCPs for initial set of coefficients + constants, calculate RMSE for each GCP then sum 2. delete GCPs contributing most error 3. compute new values from remaining GCPs + repeat until below error threshold 4. use final values to rectify image
How is the accuracy of geometric correction evaluated? • calculate RMSE for each GCP • algorithm + coefficients are more accurate when original x,y GCP coords are closer to computed coords
Describe nearest neighbor method for intensity interpolation: • brightness value closest to predicted x,y coord is assigned to output x,y coord
Describe bilinear method for intensity interpolation: • assigns output values by interpolating brightness in 4 surrounding pixels • pixels closer to desired x,y location will have more weight in final computations
Describe cubic convolution method for intensity interpolation: • assigns output values by interpolating brightness, similar to bilinear method, but uses 16 surrounding pixels
Created by: junoreg
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