Target intensity and angle scintillations: predictions for airborne sensors

Author(s):  
B. E. Pearce
1990 ◽  
Vol 11 (5) ◽  
pp. 705-725 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. ZIBORDI ◽  
G. MARACCI ◽  
P. SCHLITTENHARDT

1988 ◽  
Vol 18 (8) ◽  
pp. 1008-1016 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. G. Leckie ◽  
P. M. Teillet ◽  
G. Fedosejevs ◽  
D. P. Ostaff

Knowledge of the spectral characteristics of trees with varying degrees of needle loss is essential for developing remote sensing techniques for assessing defoliation. Spectra covering the range 400–2400 nm were acquired for single tree crowns suffering varying degrees of cumulative defoliation due to the spruce budworm (Choristoneurafumiferana (Clem.)), using a spectrometer mounted in the bucket of a boom truck. Spectra over the range 360–1100 nm were also obtained for the components of defoliated trees (i.e., needles, bare branches, and lichen), using a separate spectrometer and integrating sphere. Estimates of defoliation symptoms of each tree were made from the ground and above the tree. Changes in reflectance had a close and simple relationship with the defoliation symptoms measured. The spectral differences due to cumulative defoliation that were observed were broad-band features. The best spectral regions for differentiating levels of cumulative defoliation symptoms were the blue, red, shorter near-infrared wavelengths, and middle-infrared. Although currently available satellite and airborne sensors operate in these spectral regions, defoliation assessment may be improved by the use of optimized spectral bands.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (8) ◽  
pp. 150
Author(s):  
Kohei Inoue ◽  
Minyao Jiang ◽  
Kenji Hara

This paper proposes a method for improving saturation in the context of hue-preserving color image enhancement. The proposed method handles colors in an RGB color space, which has the form of a cube, and enhances the contrast of a given image by histogram manipulation, such as histogram equalization and histogram specification, of the intensity image. Then, the color corresponding to a target intensity is determined in a hue-preserving manner, where a gamut problem should be taken into account. We first project any color onto a surface in the RGB color space, which bisects the RGB color cube, to increase the saturation without a gamut problem. Then, we adjust the intensity of the saturation-enhanced color to the target intensity given by the histogram manipulation. The experimental results demonstrate that the proposed method achieves higher saturation than that given by related methods for hue-preserving color image enhancement.


1975 ◽  
Vol 15 (73) ◽  
pp. 193-213
Author(s):  
Moira Dunbar

AbstractSLAR imagery of Nares Strait was obtained on three flights carried out in. January, March, and August of 1973 by Canadian Forces Maritime Proving and Evaluation Unit in an Argus aircraft equipped with a Motorola APS-94D SLAR; the March flight also covered two lines in the Arctic Ocean, from Alert 10 the North Pole and from the Pole down the long. 4ºE. meridian to the ice edge at about lat. 80º N. No observations on the ground were possible, but -some back-up was available on all flights from visual observations recorded in the air, and on the March flight from infrared line-scan and vertical photography.The interpretation of ice features from the SLAR imagery is discussed, and the conclusion reached that in spite of certain ambiguities the technique has great potential which will increase with improving resolution, Extent of coverage per distance flown and independence of light and cloud conditions make it unique among airborne sensors.


2019 ◽  
Vol 8 (4) ◽  
pp. 178 ◽  
Author(s):  
Richard Boerner ◽  
Yusheng Xu ◽  
Ramona Baran ◽  
Frank Steinbacher ◽  
Ludwig Hoegner ◽  
...  

This article proposes a method for registration of two different point clouds with different point densities and noise recorded by airborne sensors in rural areas. In particular, multi-sensor point clouds with different point densities are considered. The proposed method is marker-less and uses segmented ground areas for registration.Therefore, the proposed approach offers the possibility to fuse point clouds of different sensors in rural areas within an accuracy of fine registration. In general, such registration is solved with extensive use of control points. The source point cloud is used to calculate a DEM of the ground which is further used to calculate point to raster distances of all points of the target point cloud. Furthermore, each cell of the raster DEM gets a height variance, further addressed as reconstruction accuracy, by calculating the grid. An outlier removal based on a dynamic threshold of distances is used to gain more robustness against noise and small geometry variations. The transformation parameters are calculated with an iterative least-squares optimization of the distances weighted with respect to the reconstruction accuracies of the grid. Evaluations consider two flight campaigns of the Mangfall area inBavaria, Germany, taken with different airborne LiDAR sensors with different point density. The accuracy of the proposed approach is evaluated on the whole flight strip of approximately eight square kilometers as well as on selected scenes in a closer look. For all scenes, it obtained an accuracy of rotation parameters below one tenth degrees and accuracy of translation parameters below the point spacing and chosen cell size of the raster. Furthermore, the possibility of registration of airborne LiDAR and photogrammetric point clouds from UAV taken images is shown with a similar result. The evaluation also shows the robustness of the approach in scenes where a classical iterative closest point (ICP) fails.


Sensors ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 19 (11) ◽  
pp. 2481 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ashraful Islam ◽  
Adam L. Houston ◽  
Ajay Shankar ◽  
Carrick Detweiler

Traditional configurations for mounting Temperature–Humidity (TH) sensors on multirotor Unmanned Aerial Systems (UASs) often suffer from insufficient radiation shielding, exposure to mixed and turbulent air from propellers, and inconsistent aspiration while situated in the wake of the UAS. Descent profiles using traditional methods are unreliable (when compared to an ascent profile) due to the turbulent mixing of air by the UAS while descending into that flow field. Consequently, atmospheric boundary layer profiles that rely on such configurations are bias-prone and unreliable in certain flight patterns (such as descent). This article describes and evaluates a novel sensor housing designed to shield airborne sensors from artificial heat sources and artificial wet-bulbing while pulling air from outside the rotor wash influence. The housing is mounted above the propellers to exploit the rotor-induced pressure deficits that passively induce a high-speed laminar airflow to aspirate the sensor consistently. Our design is modular, accommodates a variety of other sensors, and would be compatible with a wide range of commercially available multirotors. Extensive flight tests conducted at altitudes up to 500 m Above Ground Level (AGL) show that the housing facilitates reliable measurements of the boundary layer phenomena and is invariant in orientation to the ambient wind, even at high vertical/horizontal speeds (up to 5 m/s) for the UAS. A low standard deviation of errors shows a good agreement between the ascent and descent profiles and proves our unique design is reliable for various UAS missions.


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