International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing, Vol. 32, Part 7-4-3 W6, Valladolid, Spain, 3-4 June, 1999
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1.1. Digital forest inventory mapping
Actual stand borders are delineated with the aid of BAV
orthophotos, generated from periodically acquired imagery for
updating topographic maps. The low spectral response of the
panchromatic images are not appropriate for delineating forest
stand borders.
1.2. High resolution satellite data
Nearly every nation active in space technology has the tendency
of developing high resolution optical satellite stereo systems
(Konecny and Schiewe, 1997). Recently, high resolution optical
satellite data is made available for civil applications and the
trend will definitely improve in near future. The era of high
resolution satellite data already started with the launch of the
Indian satellite IRS-1C in 1995. The expected start of the
commercial era of high resolution Earth Observing satellites at
the end of the year 1997 (Fritz, 1996) was delayed up to now
due to failed missions (EarlyBird®).
The recently launched IKONOS-1 also failed. Space Imaging®
is however confident that with the launch of IKONOS-2 they
will achieve their goal. The IKONOS-2 mission will be
followed by the missions of QuickBird® and OrbView®-3 later
this year with a spatial resolution between 1 and 4m (see Table
1).
Most of the systems do not only provide a very high spatial
resolution but also stereo capability, which offers the possibility
not only to extract two-dimensional spatial information but also
height information. In addition, a large number of satellites with
similar capabilities will also reduce the weather dependency due
to the more frequent area coverage by all satellites together.
Some people expect that operation of the above mentioned high
resolution satellite systems will substitute many applications of
aerial photography. In particular, it is expected that the price of
satellite products will be lower than those derived from aerial
photography (Fritz, 1996). In addition, satellite data provide
direct digital use and integration in existing digital databases.
1.3. Sensor fusion
Due to technical reasons, optical satellite data have either a high
spectral or a high spatial resolution. In order to use the benefit of
both, several data fusion techniques have been developed to
integrate information from different datasets in one dataset.
Sensor Fusion is a part of the wider defined term Data Fusion.
The following definition of Data Fusion was adopted by the
EARSeL - SEE - EMP working group (Wald, 1998):
"data fusion is a formal framework in which are expressed
means and tools for the alliance of data originating from
different sources. It aims at obtaining information of greater
quality; the exact definition of ’greater quality’ will depend
upon the application".
This definition emphasizes explicitly data from different
sources. If these data are from imaging sensors, the fusion is
described by the term Sensor or Image Fusion. A definition is
given by van Genderen and Pohl (1994):
" Image Fusion is the combination of two or more different
images to form a new image by using a certain algorithm."
At the end of the 70s, Dailly et al. (1979) tried to combine
Landsat MSS and SIR-A radar data and Chavez et al. (1986)
fused Landsat TM and panchromatic aerial photographs. A list
of fusing different image types is given by Jensen (1996) and
Pohl (1996).
Standard pixel-based image fusion procedures (Pohl and van
Genderen, 1998) like IHS, PC A and Brovey have been applied
System
IRS-1C+D
MOMS-2P
Earth Watch
Space Imaging
Orbital Sciences
Characteristics
’QuickBird’
Tkonos-2’
’OrbView-3’
Panchromatic
0.50 - 0.75
0.52 - 0.76
0.45 - 0.90
0.50 - 0.90
0.45 - 0.90
Spectral bands:
Blue
0.449-0.511
0.45 - 0.52
0.45 - 0.52
0.45 - 0.52
Green
0.52 - 0.59
0.532 - 0.576
0.53 - 0.59
0.52 - 0.60
0.52 - 0.60
Red
0.62 - 0.68
0.645 - 0.677
0.63 - 0.69
0.63 - 0.69
0.63 - 0.69
NIR
0.77 - 0.86
0.772-0.815
0.77 - 0.90
0.76 - 0.90
0.76 - 0.90
SWIR
1.55 - 1.70
(1.55 - 1.75)
Resolution (m)
Pan (Nadir)
5.8
6
1+2
1
1
Spectral
23.5
18
4
4
4
Stereo capability
No
Along track
Along track
Along track
Along track
Orbit
Sun-syn.
+/- 28.5 °
Sun-syn.
Sun-syn.
Sun-syn.
Flying height (km)
817
ca. 296
600
680
470
Scene coverage
70x70(p)
78
6x6 / 30x30
60x60
15x15
(km 2 )
142x142 (m)
Mission duration
1994-2000
1995-1999
from 1999
from 1999
from 1999
Repetition (days)
24
16-20
14
14-16
Table 1. Description of present and near-future high resolution satellite systems (spectral bands in pm).