GEO-INFORMATICS
(CE-287)
Misbah Kiran
MCE-Risalpur
NUST
CONTENT
2
Pixel
Resolution
Spatial Resolution
Spectral Resolution
Temporal Resolution
Radiometric Resolution
SPECTRAL RESOLUTION
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Spectral resolution describes the wavelength intervals
in the electromagnetic spectrum that a sensor can
record or sense
Each wavelength interval is referred as band, which
records a specific portion of the electromagnetic
spectrum
High spectral resolution is achieved by narrow band
widths which, collectively, are likely to provide a more
accurate spectral signature for discrete objects than
broad band width
DIGITAL IMAGE
A group of divided small cells with integer values of average intensity
is called digital image
It is regular array of pixels, or picture elements and is described in
terms of its geometry and its radiometry
Digital images consist of discrete picture elements called PIXELS
As the pixel size is reduced more scene detail is preserved (spatial
resolution)
128 128 255
DN
255 128 PIXEL
255
Matrix of Numbers
DIGITAL IMAGE
WHY DIGITAL IMAGE?
No digitization is required by user
No info missing or change from provider to user’s computer
Data storage is easier
No color loss during the storage
Contains more info (> 3 bands)
Flexible hard copy output (combinations)
Pixel
Definition: A picture element which has both spatial and spectral
properties
The spatial property defines the dimensions of the corresponding
ground area.
The spectral property defines the intensity of the spectral response
for a pixel in a particular band
– Mostly, Pixels are square 55 Y
– Aspect of a pixel is ratio of its length and width
X
RESOLUTION
Resolution indicates the smallest observable (Measurable)
difference
Image resolution describes the details in an image
Resolution is defined as the ability of an entire remote-sensing
system, to render a sharply-defined image :
Spatial, Spectral, Radiometric, Temporal
(These are the properties of RS instruments)
SPATIAL RESOLUTION
It refers to the size of the area on the ground represented by
each pixel (area covered by a pixel)
Is an indication of how well a sensor can records spatial details
Spatial resolution is the measure of smallest object that can be
detected by a satellite sensor
In raster images, the smaller the area of land that each cell
represents, the higher the resolution of the data, and higher the
spatial accuracy, and larger the files needed to store the data
SPATIAL RESOLUTION
• Depends upon
Construction of the detector element in sensor-determines
“pixel” size
View angle of sensor
Flying height of aircraft or orbital height of satellite
SPATIAL RESOLUTION
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Spatial resolution is also expressed as Ground
projected Instantaneous Field of View( IFOV)
IFOV is an angle subtended by the
geometrical projection of a single detector
element to the Earth surface
(Size of the Area)= C x A
To detect an object, it has to be equal or
larger than the resolution ,spectrally
different from its surrounding objects
SPATIAL RESOLUTION
Coarse / low Resolution- only large features are visible
> 30 meters to > 1000 meters
Medium Resolution
>4 meters to 30 meters
High /fine Resolution- small objects can be detected, more
ground details
0.4 to 4 meters
HIGH RESOLUTION SATELLITE IMAGES
WorldView-2 GeoEye-1 QuickBird pan-sharpened
SPATIAL RESOLUTION
High resolution refers to the small pixel size- fine ground details
Low resolution- large pixel size, less details
SPATIAL RESOLUTION
Satellite Resolution
Quick Bird (Pan) 0.61 m
IRS-1C (Pan) 5,8 m
SPOT – 5 (Pan) 2.5 m
SPOT – 5 (XS) 10 m
LANDSAT TM 30 m
LANDSAT MSS 80 m
NOAA 1 km
Map Scale
The ratio of distance on an image or map, to actual ground distance
A map with a scale of 1:100,000, an object of 1cm length on the map
would actually be an object 100,000cm (1km) long on the ground.
Maps or images with small "map-to-ground ratios" are referred to as
small scale (e.g. 1:100,000),
and those with larger ratios (e.g. 1:5,000) are called large scale.
SPATIAL RESOLUTION
Scale 1:500,000 Scale 1:200,000 Scale 1:100,000
1 cm = 5 kilometer 1 cm = 2 kilometer 1 cm = 1 kilometer
Scale 1:50,000 Scale 1:25,000 Scale 1:10,000
1 cm = 500 meters 1 cm = 250 meters 1 cm = 100 meters
Scale Vs Pixel Size
Scale Approx Pixel Size (M) Sensor
1: 50,000 5 AC, IKONOS,Orbview-3
1: 250,000 25 SPOT, Landsat TM
1: 500,000 50 Landsat MSS
1: 10,000,000 1000 NOAA AVHRR
SPECTRAL RESOLUTION
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It refers to the specific wavelength intervals in the electromagnetic
spectrum that a sensor can record or is sensitive to
Each wavelength interval is referred as band, which records a specific
portion of the electromagnetic spectrum
High spectral resolution is achieved by narrow band widths which,
collectively, are likely to provide a more accurate spectral signature for
discrete objects than broad band width
The finer the spectral resolution, the narrower the wavelength range
for a particular channel or band
In general, it is the no of bands of the remote sensing sensor system
SPECTRAL RESOLUTION
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Is the ability of a sensor to define fine wavelength intervals
Panchromatic
One Band
Multispectral
Three Bands
TYPES OF IMAGE FOR SPECTRAL RES
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Types of remotely sensed images:
Panchromatic
Multispectral
Hyperspectral
Panchromatic imagery is single-band or monochrome imagery
Multispectral imagery is imagery with data recorded in two or more
bands
same scene Imaged simultaneously in several spectral bands of
EMR Spectrum
Hyperspectral imagery data recorded in 100s bands (very narrow)
TEMPORAL RESOLUTION
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How often a given place on the earth is revisited( imaged) by a
remote sensing system
Temporal resolution of RS satellites is fixed depending upon the
orbital parameters
Each satellite has its own unique revisit schedule for obtaining
imagery of a particular area
If a satellite imaged the same area every 16 days, then its
temporal resolution would be 16 days
TEMPORAL RESOLUTION
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With moving sensor, the revisit time can be less as compared to
fixed sensors ( one to five days)
actual temporal resolution of a sensor depends on
satellite/sensor capabilities
the swath overlap
Latitude
It is an important factor to consider in change detection studies,
for short as well as long –lived phenomena
Aerial imaging , temporal resolution is flexible , rather weather
dependent
RADIOMETRIC RESOLUTION
It describes the ability of imaging system to discriminate very
slight differences in energy
Describe the actual information content in an image, sensor’s
sensitivity to the magnitude of the electromagnetic energy
The ability of an imaging system to record many levels of
brightness, coarse radiometric resolution records very few
brightness levels or a few bits, whereas , fine resolution records
the same scene using many brightness levels
RADIOMETRIC RESOLUTION
Defines the sensitivity of detector to differences in signal strength
as it records the radiant flux reflected or emitted from the target
The finer the radiometric resolution of the sensor, the more
sensitive it is to detecting small differences in reflected or
emitted energy
The greater the number of levels the greater the detail in the
information, apparent difference is lower, as eye is more
sensitive to hue than intensity
RADIOMETRIC RESOLUTION
Measuring /digitizing the amplitude is called quantization
L= 2K
Where L= Discrete gray levels allowed for each pixel
Assumed that discrete gray levels are equally spaced and integers in the
interval [ 0, L-1]
The number of bits required to store a digital image is
b= MxNxK, where M.N are the no of rows and columns of image,
If M=N, then b= N2K
RADIOMETRIC RESOLUTION
Brightness value range
If 1 bit data, 2 tones: Black (0) and White (1)
If 2 bit data, 4 tones: Black (0) and White (3)
If 4 bit data, 16 tones: Black (0) and White (15)
If 5 bit data, 32 tones: Black (0) and White (31)
If 6 bit data, 64tones: Black (0) and White (63)
If 7 bit data, 128 tones: Black (0) and White (127)
If 8 bit data, 256 tones: Black (0) and White (255)
If 11 bit data, 2048 tones: Black (0) and White (2047)
RADIOMETRIC RESOLUTION
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1-bit quantization (2 levels) 2-bit quantization (4 levels) 3-bit quantization (8 levels)
Radiometric Resolution
Radiometric resolution used by commonly satellites
are
NOAA 10 BITS
LANDSAT MSS 6 BITS
LANDSAT TM 8 BITS
SPOT HRV 8 BITS
IKONOS 11BITS
Resolution of Remotely Sensed Data
Temporal Resolution
– Frequency of return of platform
– Determined by orbits and instrument characteristics
Spectral Resolution
–Detail by which spectrum is represented
•Spectral range of each band
•Number of bands
Spatial Resolution
–Spatial “area "represented by each data cell (displayed as a pixel)
–Determined by altitude of platform and optics
Radiometric Resolution
Ability to record number of brightness level
Depends upon sensors sensitivity
Spatial, Spectral, and Radiometric
Resolutions
There are trade-offs between spatial, spectral, and radiometric
resolutions
For high spatial resolution, the sensor has to have a small IFOV
This reduces the amount of energy that can be detected as the
area of the ground resolution cell within the IFOV becomes small
Leads to reduced radiometric resolution-the ability to detect fine
energy differences
To increase the amount of energy detected (and thus, the
radiometric resolution) without reducing spatial resolution,
Would have to broaden the wavelength range ( Reduce Spectral
Resolution)
Conversely, coarser spatial resolution would allow improved
radiometric and/or spectral resolution.
Thus, these three types of resolution must be balanced against the
desired capabilities and objectives of the sensor
MULTI IMAGING
MULTISPECTRAL IMAGING
Viewing a given area in several narrow bands to obtain better
identification / classification of objects
MULTISTATION IMAGING
Observation of the same area from different positions of the
platform to yield stereoscopic data to obtain height info
MULTIDATE IMAGING
Observation made over the same area on different dates to
monitor objects which are dynamically changing with time(crops
growth), also referred as temporal characteristics
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THANK YOU