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GEOGG141/ GEOG3051 Principles & Practice of Remote Sensing (PPRS) 1: Introduction to Remote Sensing Dr. Mathias (Mat) Disney UCL Geography Office: 113,

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Presentation on theme: "GEOGG141/ GEOG3051 Principles & Practice of Remote Sensing (PPRS) 1: Introduction to Remote Sensing Dr. Mathias (Mat) Disney UCL Geography Office: 113,"— Presentation transcript:

1 GEOGG141/ GEOG3051 Principles & Practice of Remote Sensing (PPRS) 1: Introduction to Remote Sensing Dr. Mathias (Mat) Disney UCL Geography Office: 113, Pearson Building Tel: 7679 0592 Email: mdisney@ucl.geog.ac.uk www.geog.ucl.ac.uk/~mdisney

2 2 Component 1 (GEOGG141 only) –Mapping principles (Dowman, Iliffe, Haklay, Backes, Smith, Cross) –Understanding the geometry of data acquisition –Orbits, geoids and principles of geodesy Component 2 (GEOGG141 & GEOG3051) –Radiometric principles (Disney) –Understanding the principles of radiation –Orbits, geoids and principles of geodesy Format

3 3 Remote Sensing at UCL –NERC National Centre for Earth Observation (NCEO) http://www.nceo.ac.uk/ ) http://www.nceo.ac.uk/ –Involvement in several themes at UCL Cryosphere @ Earth Sciences: http://www.cpom.org/ (Wingham, Laxman et al.)http://www.cpom.org/ Carbon Theme @ Geography (Lewis, Mat Disney et al.) Solid Earth: COMET @ GE http://comet.nerc.ac.uk/ (Ziebart)http://comet.nerc.ac.uk/ –More generally MSSL: http://www.ucl.ac.uk/mssl e.g. imaging (Muller), planetary, astro, instrumentshttp://www.ucl.ac.uk/mssl UK prof. body - Remote Sensing and Photogrammetry Society –http://www.rspsoc.org/ Miscellaneous

4 4 Reading and browsing Remote sensing Campbell, J. B. (2006) Introduction to Remote Sensing (4 th ed), London:Taylor and Francis. Harris, R. (1987) "Satellite Remote Sensing, An Introduction", Routledge & Kegan Paul. Jensen, J. R. (2006, 2 nd ed) Remote Sensing of the Environment: An Earth Resource Perspective, Prentice Hall, New Jersey. (Excellent on RS but no image processing). Jensen, J. R. (2005, 3rd ed.) Introductory Digital Image Processing, Prentice Hall, New Jersey. (Companion to above) BUT some available online at http://www.cla.sc.edu/geog/rslab/751/index.html http://www.cla.sc.edu/geog/rslab/751/index.html Jones, H. and Vaughan, R. (2010, paperback) Remote Sensing of Vegetation: Principles, Techniques, and Applications, OUP, Oxford. Excellent. Lillesand, T. M., Kiefer, R. W. and Chipman, J. W. (2004, 5th ed.) Remote Sensing and Image Interpretation, John Wiley, New York. Mather, P. M. (2004) Computer Processing of Remotely ‑ sensed Images, 3rdEdition. John Wiley and Sons, Chichester. Rees, W. G. (2001, 2 nd ed.). Physical Principles of Remote Sensing, Cambridge Univ. Press. Warner, T. A., Nellis, M. D. and Foody, G. M. eds. (2009) The SAGE Handbook of Remote Sensing (Hardcover). Limited depth, but very wide-ranging – excellent reference book. General Monteith, J. L. and Unsworth, M. H. (1990) ”Principles of Environmental Physics”, 2 nd ed. Edward Arnold, London. Hilborn, R. and Mangel, M. (1997) “The Ecological Detective: Confronting models with data”, Monographs in population biology 28, Princeton University Press, New Jersey, USA.

5 5 Moodle & www.geog.ucl.ac.uk/~mdisney/pprs.html Web Tutorials http://rst.gsfc.nasa.gov/ http://earth.esa.int/applications/data_util/SARDOCS/spaceborne/Radar_Courses/ http://www.crisp.nus.edu.sg/~research/tutorial/image.htm http://www.ccrs.nrcan.gc.ca/ccrs/learn/tutorials/fundam/fundam_e.html http://octopus.gma.org/surfing/satellites/index.html Glossary of alphabet soup acronyms! http://www.ccrs.nrcan.gc.ca/ccrs/learn/terms/glossary/glossary_e.html Other resources NASA www.nasa.gov NASAs Visible Earth (source of data): http://visibleearth.nasa.gov/ European Space Agency earth.esa.int NOAA www.noaa.gov Remote sensing and Photogrammetry Society UK www.rspsoc.orgwww.rspsoc.org IKONOS: http://www.spaceimaging.com/http://www.spaceimaging.com/ QuickBird: http://www.digitalglobe.com/ Browsing

6 6 General introduction to remote sensing (RS), Earth Observation (EO)....... –definitions of RS –Why do we do it? Applications and issues –Who and where? –Concepts and terms remote sensing process, end-to-end Lecture outline

7 7 The Experts say "Remote Sensing is...”...techniques for collecting image or other forms of data about an object from measurements made at a distance from the object, and the processing and analysis of the data (RESORS, CCRS). ”...the science (and to some extent, art) of acquiring information about the Earth's surface without actually being in contact with it. This is done by sensing and recording reflected or emitted energy and processing, analyzing, and applying that information.” http://www.ccrs.nrcan.gc.ca/ccrs/learn/tutorials/fundam/chapter1/chapter1_1_e.html What is remote sensing?

8 8 The not so experts say "Remote Sensing is...” Advanced colouring-in. Seeing what can't be seen, then convincing someone that you're right. Being as far away from your object of study as possible and getting the computer to handle the numbers. Legitimised voyeurism (more of the same from http://www.ccrs.nrcan.gc.ca/ccrs/eduref/misc) What is remote sensing (II)?

9 9 Remote Sensing Examples First aerial photo credited to Frenchman Felix Tournachon in Bievre Valley, 1858. Boston from balloon (oldest preserved aerial photo), 1860, by James Wallace Black.

10 10 Remote Sensing Examples Kites (still used!) Panorama of San Francisco, 1906. Up to 9 large kites used to carry camera weighing 23kg.

11 11 Remote Sensing Examples

12 12 Remote Sensing: scales and platforms Not always big/expensive equipment Individual/small groups Calibration/validation campaigns

13 13 Remote Sensing: scales and platforms Both taken via kite aerial photography http://arch.ced.berkeley.edu/kap/kaptoc.html http://activetectonics.la.asu.edu/Fires_and_Floods/

14 14 Remote Sensing: scales and platforms Platform depends on application What information do we want? How much detail? What type of detail? upscale http://www-imk.fzk.de:8080/imk2/mipas-b/mipas-b.htm upscale

15 15 Remote Sensing: scales and platforms E.g. aerial photography From multimap.com Most of UK Cost? Time?

16 16 Remote Sensing: scales and platforms Many types of satellite Different orbits, instruments, applications upscale

17 17 Remote Sensing Examples Global maps of vegetation from MODIS instrument

18 18 Remote Sensing Examples Global maps of sea surface temperature and land surface reflectance from MODIS instrument

19 19 Remote sensing applications Environmental: climate, ecosystem, hazard mapping and monitoring, vegetation, carbon cycle, oceans, ice Commercial: telecomms, agriculture, geology and petroleum, mapping Military: reconnaissance, mapping, navigation (GPS) Weather monitoring and prediction Many, many more

20 20 Collection of data –Some type of remotely measured signal –Electromagnetic radiation of some form Transformation of signal into something useful –Information extraction –Use of information to answer a question or confirm/contradict a hypothesis EO process in summary.....

21 21 Remote sensing process: I Statement of problem What information do we want? Appropriate problem-solving approach? Formulate hypothesis Hypothesis testing In situ: field, lab, ancillary data (Meteorology? Historical? Other?) EO data: Type? Resolution? Cost? Availability? Pre/post processing? Data collection Analog: visual, expert interp. Digital: spatial, photogrammetric, spectral etc. Modelling: prediction & understanding Information extraction Data analysis Products: images, maps, thematic maps, databases etc. Models: parameters and predictions Quantify: error & uncertainty analysis Graphs and statistics Presentation of information

22 22 The Remote Sensing Process: II Collection of information about an object without coming into physical contact with that object Passive: solar reflected/emitted Active:RADAR (backscattered); LiDAR (reflected)

23 23 The Remote Sensing Process: III What are we collecting? –Electromagnetic radiation (EMR) What is the source? –Solar radiation passive – reflected (vis/NIR), emitted (thermal) –OR artificial source active - RADAR, LiDAR

24 24 Electromagnetic radiation? Electric field (E) Magnetic field (M) Perpendicular and travel at velocity, c (3x10 8 ms -1 )

25 25 Energy radiated from sun (or active sensor) Energy  1/wavelength (1/ ) –shorter (higher f) == higher energy –longer (lower f) == lower energy from http://rst.gsfc.nasa.gov/Intro/Part2_4.html

26 26 Information What type of information are we trying to get at? What information is available from RS? –Spatial, spectral, temporal, angular, polarization, etc.

27 27 Spectral information: vegetation Wavelength, nm 40060080010001200 reflectance(%) 0.0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 very high leaf area very low leaf area sunlit soil NIR, high reflectance Visible red, low reflectance Visible green, higher than red

28 28 Spectral information: vegetation

29 29 Colour Composites: spectral ‘Real Colour’ composite Red band on red Green band on green Blue band on blue Approximates “real” colour (RGB colour composite) Landsat TM image of Swanley, 1988

30 30 Colour Composites: spectral ‘False Colour’ composite (FCC) NIR band on red red band on green green band on blue

31 31 Colour Composites: spectral ‘False Colour’ composite NIR band on red red band on green green band on blue

32 32 Colour Composites: temporal ‘False Colour’ composite many channel data, much not comparable to RGB (visible) –e.g. Multi-temporal data –but display as spectral –AVHRR MVC 1995 April August September

33 33 Rondonia 1975 Temporal information Change detection http://earth.jsc.nasa.gov/lores.cgi?PHOTO=STS046-078-026 http://www.yale.edu/ceo/DataArchive/brazil.html Rondonia 1986 Rondonia 1992

34 34 Colour Composites: angular ‘False Colour’ composite many channel data, much not comparable to RGB (visible) –e.g. MISR -Multi-angular data (August 2000) Real colour composite (RCC) Northeast Botswana 0 o ; +45 o ; -45 o

35 35 when we view an RS image, we see a 'picture’ BUT need to be aware of the 'image formation process' to: –understand and use the information content of the image and factors operating on it –spatially reference the data Always bear in mind.....

36 36 Why do we use remote sensing? Many monitoring issues global or regional Drawbacks of in situ measurement ….. Remote sensing can provide (not always!) –Global coverage Range of spatial resolutions –Temporal coverage (repeat viewing) –Spectral information (wavelength) –Angular information (different view angles)

37 37 source of spatial and temporal information (land surface, oceans, atmosphere, ice) monitor and develop understanding of environment (measurement and modelling) information can be accurate, timely, consistent remote access some historical data (1960s/70s+) move to quantitative RS e.g. data for climate –some commercial applications (growing?) e.g. weather –typically (geo)'physical' information but information widely used (surrogate - tsetse fly mapping) –derive data (raster) for input to GIS (land cover, temperature etc.) Why do we study/use remote sensing?

38 38 Caveats! Remote sensing has many problems –Can be expensive –Technically difficult –NOT direct measure surrogate variables e.g. reflectance (%), brightness temperature (Wm -2  o K), backscatter (dB) RELATE to other, more direct properties.

39 39 Colour Composites: polarisation ‘False Colour’ composite many channel data, much not comparable to RGB (visible) –e.g. Multi-polarisation SAR HH: Horizontal transmitted polarization and Horizontal received polarization VV: Vertical transmitted polarization and Vertical received polarization HV: Horizontal transmitted polarization and Vertical received polarization

40 40 Back to the process.... What sort of parameters are of interest? Variables describing Earth system....

41 41 Information extraction process After Jensen, p. 22 Image interpretation Tone, colour, stereo parallax Size, shape, texture, pattern, fractal dimension Height/shadow Site, association Primary elements Spatial arrangements Secondary elements Context Analogue image processing Multi: spectral, spatial, temporal, angular, scale, disciplinary Visualisation Ancillary info.: field and lab measurements, literature etc. Presentation of information Multi: spectral, spatial, temporal, angular, scale, disciplinary Statistical/rule- based patterns Hyperspectral Modelling and simulation

42 42 Example: Vegetation canopy modelling Develop detailed 3D models Simulate canopy scattering behaviour Compare with observations

43 43 Output: above/below canopy signal  Light environment below a deciduous (birch) canopy

44 44 LIDAR signal: single birch tree  Allows interpretation of signal, development of new methods

45 45 EO and the Earth “System” From Ruddiman, W. F., 2001. Earth's Climate: past and future. External forcing Hydrosphere Atmosphere Geosphere Cryosphere Biosphere

46 46 Example biophysical variables After Jensen, p. 9

47 47 Example biophysical variables After Jensen, p. 9 Good discussion of spectral information extraction: http://dynamo.ecn.purdue.edu/~landgreb/Principles.pdf

48 48 Remote Sensing Examples Ice sheet dynamics Wingham et al. Science, 282 (5388): 456.

49 49 Electromagnetic spectrum Zoom in on visible part of the EM spectrum –very small part –from visible blue (shorter ) –to visible red (longer ) –~0.4 to ~0.7  m (10 -6 m)

50 50 Electromagnetic spectrum Interaction with the atmosphere –transmission NOT even across the spectrum –need to choose bands carefully!

51 51 http://www.spaceimaging.com/gallery/zoomviewer.asp?zoomifyImagePath=http://www.spa ceimaging.com/gallery/zoomify/london_08_08_03/&zoomifyX=0&zoomifyY=0&zoomifyZoo m=10&zoomifyToolbar=1&zoomifyNavWin=1&location=London,%20Englandhttp://www.spaceimaging.com/gallery/zoomviewer.asp?zoomifyImagePath=http://www.spa ceimaging.com/gallery/zoomify/london_08_08_03/&zoomifyX=0&zoomifyY=0&zoomifyZoo m=10&zoomifyToolbar=1&zoomifyNavWin=1&location=London,%20England http://www.digitalglobe.com/images/katrina/new_orleans_dwtn_aug31_05_dg.jpg http://www.spaceimaging.com/gallery/tsunami/default.htm http://www.spaceimaging.com/gallery/9-11/default.htm Interesting stuff…..


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