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International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences, Vol XXXV, Part B4. Istanbul 2004
(2) enhanced panchromatic plus the haze-corrected
multispectral.
The various steps for integrating the panchromatic and
multispectral images were described above. These were
followed by the normalization of bands and their
combination.
7. NORMALIZATION AND COMBINATION OF
BANDS
Knowing that intensity I (photon count) depends mostly on
external factors, such as sun angles, surface orientation,
shadow, band normalization was used which splits the
intensity and reflectance(s) for proper feature extraction. This
was carried out by dividing the intensity of the panchromatic
band by the sum of intensities of the three bands of the
multispectral for each image element (resampled to 10 m
scene element).
Ip/Id x scaling factor,
Ip is the intensity of panchromatic and Id is R+G+B= sum
norm
First, for all image elements the sum of bands (R, G, B)
which represents the total photon count (intensity) was
calculated and the result was merged with the enhanced
panchromatic image to get the ratio. The final step was to
merge the ratio result and the enhanced multispectral image.
Figure 7 shows the result.
Figure 7. Combination of enhanced panchromatic and
multispectral with saturation enhancement
Another test was carried out by merging the enhanced
panchromatic image with the non-enhanced (original)
multispectral image.
8. CONCLUSIONS
The products were shown to more than 30 persons, including
specialists in various carth science and mapping disciplines.
Their reactions were positive to the combination of the en-
hanced panchromatic and the saturated enhanced bands of the
multispectral data. It seems likely that this result could be a
751
multipurpose image- map.
If it is used as a background of an image- map, it will be
incomplete without indication of other information, such as
utilities, names, administrative boundaries, etc. Annotation is
therefore needed.
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