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3 DAIS IMAGERY AND PROCESSING
3.1 The DAIS 7915 instrument
The Digital Airborne Imaging Spectrometer (DAIS7915) is a 79 channel, high-resolution spectrometer. The DAIS is an
experimental scanner, financed by the Furopean Union and DLR, and built by the Geophysical Environmental Research
Corporation (GER). The 79 spectral bands cover the range from the visible- to the thermal wavelengths. The scanner can be
mounted on the Dornier DO 228 aircraft. Table 1 gives the specifications for the different spectrometers. Six spectral bands
between 8 en 12 jum are used for the measurement of the radiant temperature of land surfaces. Besides the high spectral
resolution, the DAIS 7915 also has a very high spatial resolution. At a flight altitude of approximately 3000 m. the spatial
resolution of the recorded image is 6 by 6 meter.
Before processing, the 79 bands were used for a visual inspection of image quality. Image quality is generally good in
the visible and near infrared bands. Striping occurred in most of the SWIR bands. The striping in some SWIR bands is
probably caused by vibration of the Dornier DO228 prop-engines (Strobl, 1996b).
3.2 Georeferencing of the DAIS imagery
' The Peyne flight strip was flown from the north-west to the south-east. The first step in the georeferencing of the image
is a rotation of the flight strip to the geographical north. The flight strip is rotated over 137 degrees with the cubic
convolution resampling method. A spatial subset of the flight strip is taken to reduce the size of the image. This spatial
subset corresponds with the size of the study area. Fifty DGPS measurements were taken in order to correct for the
distortions in the image. The RMS-error of the image, caused by the distortions, comes to 7.856 pixels. Transformation
with a second-degree polynomial with the cubic convolution resampling technique gave the best results for the Peyne
flight strip. Most of the large-scale distortions are corrected, but some of the small-scale distortions cannot be corrected
because of the rough transformation algorithm.
3.3 Processing of the optical DAIS bands
In order to perform noise reduction, the Minimum Noise Fraction transformation (MNF) can be used. This
transformation algorithm can be described as a cascaded Principal Component transformation (PCA). The MNF
transformation decorrelates and rescales the noise in the data. The output of the MNF transformation is a given
eigenvalue for each MNF band. When the eigenvalue of an MNF band is small (less than one), the image is noise
dominated (Green, 1998). The MNF images with the largest eigenvalues can be transformed back to the original data
space. The original data space is restored, however without the determined noise.
To correct for atmospheric effects, the empirical line method is applied. This method uses field measurements to correct
the atmospheric effects. Reflectance spectra of homogeneous targets measured in the field are compared to the cor-
responding areas in the image. A linear regression function is computed for each spectral channel in the image. The
regression has been calculated by fitting the regression line through the spectra. The advantage of this calibration
technique is the removal of the solar irradiance curve and the atmospheric path radiance, because of the difference in
path length through the atmosphere. The distance between the DAIS sensor and the ground is approximately 3000m,
while the path length of the field spectrometer is only less than one meter (de Jong, 1998b). In order to obtain a good
empirical line conversion function, reflectance spectra of dark and bright targets are used, like water, asphalt and soil.
To classify the DAIS image into land cover classes, the Spectral Angle Mapper (SAM) Classification algorithm is used.
This classification method is a supervised classification technique, which uses field derived spectral endmembers
(Kruse et al., 1993). The SAM classification algorithm results in a continuous land cover map.
3.4 Processing the thermal DAIS bands
The TIR spectrometer on the DAIS scanner measures the radiant temperature, radiated from objects on the earth
surface. The unit of the thermal DAIS bands is given in radiance in [mW/(cm*ster*um)’]. In order to study the thermal
properties and behaviour of surfaces in the study area, the radiance was converted to absolute temperature in degrees
Celsius of the various land cover types in two steps: the radiant temperature is converted to blackbody temperatures and
next, the blackbody temperature is converted to absolute temperatures.
In order to obtain a blackbody image from the six thermal DAIS bands of the 1998 DAIS flight, an empirical approach
is applied. The following steps are taken:
International Archives of Photogrammetry and Remote Sensing. Vol. XXXIII, Part B7. Amsterdam 2000. 349