Week-5 Module-24 Image characteristics and different resolutions in remote sensing
Week-5 Module-24 Image characteristics and different resolutions in remote sensing
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A picture tells thousand
words and
a satellite image tells ten
thousand words
What is an image?
“An image is a pictorial representation of an object or a scene”
Forms of images
• Analog
• Digital
Analog images
• Produced by photographic sensors on paper based media or transparent media
• Variations in scene characteristics are represented as variations in brightness (grey
shades)
• Objects reflecting more energy appear brighter on the image and objects reflecting
less energy appear darker.
Digital image?
“Produced by electro optical sensors”
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SINGLE LAYER An example
DIGITAL of PANCHROMATIC
IMAGE- grey image IMAGERY
Columns / Pixels
Digital image
• Each bit records an exponent of
power 2 (e.g. 1 bit = 21 = 2). Total number of
Image Type Colour Levels
Pixel Values
• The maximum number of brightness 1-bit image 21 = 2 0-1
levels available depends on the
6-bit image 26 = 64 0-63
number of bits used in representing
the energy recorded. 7-bit image 27 = 128 0-127
8-bit image 28 = 256 0-255
• Thus, if a sensor used 8 bits to record 16-bit image 216 = 65536 0-65535
the data, there would be 28 = 256
digital values available, ranging from 0 24-bit image 224 = 16777216 0-16777215
to 255; 8-bit is the most common bit
value.
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1-bit image 2-bits image 4-bits image 8-bits image
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Making of
Coloured
/False
Colour
Composite
(FCC)
MULTI SPECTRAL IMAGE
Green
Blue Gun
Infrared
Red
Gun
In this healthy vegetation shows up in shades of red because vegetation absorbs most of green and red
energy but reflects approximately half of incidence Infrared energy. Urban areas reflect equal amount
of NIR, R & G, and therefore they appear as steel grey.
SIMULATED TRUE COLOUR COMPOSTE (FCC)
Screen Colour Gun Assignments
Green
Blue Gun
Red
Red Gun
Resolutions
• Spatial resolution
- Ability to distinguish closed spaced objects on an image
• Spectral resolution
– location, width and sensitivity of chosen bands
• Temporal resolution
– time between observations
• Radiometric resolution
– precision of observations (NOT accuracy!)
Spatial resolution
In remote sensing resolution means the resolving power
Capability to identify the presence of two objects
Capability to identify the properties of the two objects
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Broadband v narrowband?
• What is advantage of broadband?
– Collecting radiation across broader range of per band, so more
photons, so more energy
– Narrow bands give more spectral detail BUT less energy, so
lower signal (lower SNR)
– More bands = more information to store, transmit and process
– BUT more bands enables discrimination of more spectral detail
• Trade-off again
• Temporal resolution
– Time between observations
– The revisit time over same area of a satellite
• Radiometric resolution
– The number of digital levels used to express the data collected by the
sensor
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