The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences. Vol. XXXVII. Part Bl. Beijing 2008
DEMs of the Drum Mountains that were derived from
Cartosat-1 data from two different acquisition dates were
used in this study: October 24, 2005, and November 4, 2005.
Figures 3 and 4 show examples of the image data acquired
and the derived DEMs. The derived data, both DEM and
orthoimages, were compared to a number of existing data
sets to assess their vertical and horizontal accuracies. Those
data sets include the following:
• National Elevation Dataset (NED)
• Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM) DEM
• Advanced Spacebome Thermal Emission and
Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) DEM
• Digital Ortho Quarter Quads (DOQQ)
The following table provides a description of the key
attributes for the Cartosat-1 data and each of the above
comparison data sets.
Sensor/Source
Satellite/Source
Spatial
Resolution
Datum
Cartosat-1
ISRO Satellite
2.5 meters
WGS84
NED
Various USGS
Map Sources
10 meters
NAD83
SRTM
NASA Shuttle
Mission
30 meters
WGS84
ASTER
NASA Terra
Satellite
30 meters
WGS84
DOQQ
Derived from
aerial photos
5 meters
NAD83
4. Methodology
This study assesses the accuracy of DEMs derived from
Cartosat-1 data with three different digital elevation data sets,
each of which is derived from a different source. The
National Elevation Dataset (NED) is a 10-m USGS DEM
dataset derived from best available map data sources.
ASTER DEMs are derived from visible-near infrared data
collected by ASTER on board the NASA Terra satellite.
SRTM DEMs are based on a fixed baseline radar
interferometry-derived data, acquired by a NASA Shuttle
mission. DOQQ data are enhanced computer-generated
images of airborne mission-derived aerial photographs.
DOQQ data are primarily used to assess the horizontal
accuracy (x, y), while the other three are used to investigate
vertical accuracy (z).
Table 1: Key attributes of the Cartosat-1 and comparison
data sets
Figure 4: Cartosat-1 Digital elevation model - Drum Mts. site
Figure 5: Assessment methodology
Figure 5 describes the assessment methodology followed in
this study. The 2.5-meter Cartosat-1 data were processed
with 10 meters postings to create both DEMs and
orthocorrected data using the ENVI* plug-in software. The
ASTER scenes of the Drum Mountains were similarly
processed at 30 meters using ENVI and Silcast software,
while the NED and SRTM data were retained in their
original 10- and 30- meters resolutions respectively. Silcast is
a Japanese software package developed to create ASTER
DEMs. Each of these elevation data sets was subset to a
USGS NED Data ( 10 m)
Cartosat-1 DEM Data (10 m)
Figure 6: Drum Mountains: Subset area for difference images
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Government.
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