SPACE IMAGING EOSAT IKONOS | DAEDALUS ATM
|
| For lo
Band um | Band um t
; —— spectr
Multispectral 4m | Multispectral 1 m ta”
1 0.420-0.450
| , There:
1 Blue 0.450-0.530 2 0.450-0.520 natic
| I
2 Green 0.520-0.610 | 3 0.520—0.600 | .
| image
4 0.605—0.625 |
5 0.630-0.690 | Nume
3 Red 0.640-0.720 from t
6 0.695-0.750 et al
4 NIR 0.770-0.880 | 7 0.760—0.900 | Patter
8 0.910-1.050 | (1996)
9 1550-1.750 |
ing of
10 2.080-2.350 | the tw
Th.IR 8.500-13.000 | the ge
sm | (
De ^ ati .
Panchromatic 1m | is a pi
Pan 0.450-0.900 | :
an ws "T this to
(stable
| rather
Table 1: The expected spaceborne BONS spectral bands? and image
he actual airborne DAEDALUS spectral bands. :
the actual airborne D pec d ticulai
is not :
2 X01 ; tispect
called ‘whisk broom’ - line scanners and the large swath f p
orm a
angle of +43°, the ground resolution degrades to 1.4m
towards the image margins. Hence the images have a 31 1
resolution of 1 m on average, in all 10 spectral bands. |
; , nt. The fir
For all environmental image analysis purposes it is es- spectr:
. . . Ds «
sential to have a spectral band in the near infrared tral4t
(NIR). There, vegetation has a very high reflectance and ixel
Ah T ; pixels
is the most distinct from non-vegetation land cover. Also, This re
plant health and plant stress show up in the increase of filled v
reflectance between the red and the NIR. Therefore we MS,
. . ~ : m^
have simulated photograph-like CIR images, where the structa
spectral bands of Green, Red and the (invisible) Near an int
Infrared (G,R,NIR) are coded by Blue, Green and Red pixels
(R,G,B), respectively, and merged into composite pseudo- much :
. 1 *
color images.
g For th
f a . : : . 2 ti S
The specifications of the new high resolution satellites onu
(see Table 1 for an example) indicate that the 1 m resolu-
tion will only be reached for panchromatic imagery. The
spectrally resolved bands will come in a spatial resolu- An oft
tion of only 4m. | panchi
(or HS
We have simulated both the panchromatic full resolution ;
; ; RGB ii
image (by weighted average of the spectral bands), and :
uratioi
the spectral band images (by averaging each 4 x 4 pixel h
M abu. ; £11 fie anchr
window into one new pixel). Results are shown in Fig. 1 p ki
A i N s ack ir
for a small nature reserve near Nürnberg, Germany.
to wor|
for SP
are sti
such a
panch:
We no!
| can be
|
of thre
: RGB ir
Postscript and PDF versions of this paper containing the color images E ju c ; | et al. (
can be downloaded from http:/ | » : ‘ Pan hroma | c ima (inn). of 1 all n: Lux à reserve around a | clearly
kogs-www.informatik.uni-hamburg.de/projects/censis/publications html lake near the aii | : 1 ] simu- i
“Source: Space Imaging EOSAT (http://www.spaceimaging.com) lated color infrare 4 m. ions.
286 Intemational Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXII, Pa Budapest, 1998 |