Full text: Mesures physiques et signatures en télédétection

Verstraete algorithm, the Global Environment Monitoring Index (GEMI), is a non-linear index which 
attempts to combine the sensitivity of the Simple Ratio (SR) for low vegetation cover and the NDVI 
for deep vegetation while being resistant to atmospheric effects. Simulations with this index, however, 
have shown it to have a small dynamic range and be highly sensitive to soil colour. The 
Atmospherically Resistant Vegetation Index (ARVI) (Kaufman and Tanre 1992) takes advantage of 
information provided by the blue waveband of the MODIS sensor to make NDVI less variable with 
atmospheric perturbation. Unfortunately, this approach cannot be applied to ATSR-2 data, since the 
assumptions behind the method cannot be translated to use a green waveband. 
The focus of this preliminary work was to consider how the information from the three optical 
channels of ATSR-2 could be used to provide a vegetation index that was resistant to atmospheric 
scattering whilst at the same time being sensitive to variation in vegetation amount. 
2. CONCEPT 
Atmospheric scattering can be separated into molecular or Rayleigh scattering and aerosol or Mie 
scattering. The former is characterised by a an optical thickness which decreases as a function of 
wavelength approximately equal to A." 4 although the exact form is contingent on atmospheric pressure. 
The effect of atmospheric aerosols on remote sensing is dependent on the chemical and physical 
characteristics of the aerosol (Kaufman 1989), although if the aerosol is assumed to be spherical it can 
be approximated by Mie Theory which also exhibits a decrease with wavelength. A further difficulty is 
the spatial and temporal inhomogeneity of the aerosol loading. With reference to remote sensing of 
vegetation the effect of atmospheric scattering declines with wavelength resulting in increased TOA 
reflectance in visible wavelengths and when allied with continuum absorption a decline in TOA 
reflectance in near-infrared wavelengths. Thus increased optical thickness can be equated to a 
rotational movement with a large positive component in the green waveband, a smaller one in the red 
and a negative component in the near-infrared. An index which is invariant with this rotational 
movement should exhibit resistance to atmospheric effects. 
The emergence of vegetation over a dark soil will result in an increase in reflectance in green 
wavelengths, although as chlorophyll density increases this may decline again; a decrease in red 
wavelengths associated with vegetation reflectance and a strong increase in near-infrared wavelengths. 
Thus an index which represents the dynamic range of reflectance in each of these bands will provide a 
good indication of vegetation presence. An index, the Angular Vegetation Index (AVI), which is 
intended to incorporate the sensitivity to vegetation presence whilst being insensitive to the rotational 
movement was defined using the three ATSR-2 channels to calculate the angle subtended in the red 
chlorophyll absorption well (Figure 1): 
AV I = tao -‘{i^k[p(A 3 )-p(A2)r 1 } + tan- 1 {iji.[p(i,)- /> (A 2 )f 1 } (1) 
where p(Xj) is the radiance in band i normalised by the exo-atmospheric incident flux and Xj is the 
centre wavelength of band i. The dependence on wavelength position is removed by normalising to 
the centre wavelength, A-2- The value of AVI is scaled to 0-1 range by subtraction from 180 and 
division by 90. 
3. MATERIALS AND METHODS 
The sensitivity of AVI to the presence of vegetation, atmospheric perturbation and soil colour was 
tested using a forward model developed for simulating the at-sensor radiance for ATSR-2. The 
simulator comprises scattering models for soil, leaves, vegetation canopy and atmosphere. Nadir 
reflectance data obtained from the Purdue Soils database (Stoner et al. 1980) were used to represent the 
soil. Off-nadir effects were generated by inversion of Hapke’s functions to derive the average particle 
single scattering albedo, cd. The remaining coefficients were represented by typical values obtained 
from other experiments.
	        
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