1,915 research outputs found

    System Engineering Analyses for the Study of Future Multispectral Land Imaging Satellite Sensors for Vegetation Monitoring

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    Vegetation monitoring is one of the key applications of earth observing systems. Landsat data have spatial resolution of 30 meters, moderate temporal coverage, and reasonable spectral sampling to capture key vegetation features. These characteristics of Landsat make it a good candidate for generating vegetation monitoring products. Recently, the next satellite in the Landsat series has been under consideration and different concepts have been proposed. In this research, we studied the impact on vegetation monitoring of two proposed potential design concepts: a wider field-of-view (FOV) instrument and the addition of red-edge spectral band(s). Three aspects were studied in this thesis: First, inspired by the potential wider FOV design, the impacts of a detector relative spectral response (RSR) central wavelength shift effect at high angles of incidence (AOI) on the radiance signal were studied and quantified. Results indicate: 1) the RSR shift effect is band-dependent and more significant in the green, red and SWIR 2 bands; 2) At high AOI, the impact of the RSR shift effect will exceed sensor noise specifications in all bands except the SWIR 1 band; and 3) The RSR shift will cause SWIR2 band more to be sensitive to atmospheric conditions. Second, also inspired by the potential wider FOV design, the impacts of the potential new wider angular observations on vegetation monitoring scientific products were studied. Both crop classification and biophysical quantity retrieval applications were studied using the simulation code DIRSIG and the canopy radiative transfer model PROSAIL. It should be noted that the RSR shift effect was also considered. Results show that for single view observation based analysis, the higher view angular observations have limited influence on both applications. However, for situations where two different angular observations are available potentially from two platforms, up to 4% improvement for crop classification and 2.9% improvement for leaf chlorophyll content retrieval were found. Third, to quantify the benefits of a potential new design with red-edge band(s), the impact of adding red-edge spectral band(s) in future Landsat instruments on agroecosystem leaf area index (LAI) and canopy chlorophyll content (CCC) retrieval were studied using a real dataset. Three major retrieval approaches were tested, results show that a potential new spectral band located between the Landsat-8 Operational Land Imager (OLI) red and NIR bands slightly improved the retrieval accuracy (LAI: R2 of 0.787 vs. 0.810 for empirical vegetation index regression approach, 0.806 vs. 0.828 for look-up-table inversion approach, and 0.925 vs. 0.933 for machine learning approach; CCC: R2 of 0.853 vs. 0.875 for empirical vegetation index regression approach, 0.500 vs. 0.570 for look-up-table inversion approach, and 0.854 vs. 0.887 for machine learning approach). In general, for the potential wider FOV design, the RSR shift effect was found to cause noticable radiance signal difference that is higher than detector noise in all OLI bands except SWIR1 band, which is not observed in the current OLI design with its 15 degree FOV. Also both the new wider angular observations and potential red-edge band(s) were found to slightly improve the vegetation monitoring product accuracy. In the future, the RSR shift effect in other optical designs should be evaluated since this study assumed the angle reaching the filter array is the same as the angle reaching the sensor. In addition to improve the accuracy of the off angle imaging study, a 3D vegetation geometry model should be explored for vegetation monitoring related studies instead of the 2D PROSAIL model used in this thesis

    Algorithm theoretical basis document

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    A sensor view model to investigate the influence of tree crowns on effective urban thermal anisotropy

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    A sensor view model is modified to include trees using a gap probability approach to estimate foliage view factors and an energy budget model for leaf surface temperatures (SUMVEG). The model is found to compare well with airborne thermal infrared (TIR) surface temperature measurements. SUMVEG is used to investigate the influence of trees on thermal anisotropy for narrow field-of-view TIR remote sensors over treed residential urban surfaces. Tests on regularly-spaced arrays of cubes on March 28 and June 21 at latitudes of 47.6°N and 25.8°N show that trees both decrease and increase anisotropy as a function of tree crown and building plan fractions. In compact geometries, anisotropy tends to decrease with tree crown plan fraction, with the opposite in open geometries, though trees taller than building height cause anisotropy to increase for all building plan fractions. These results help better understand and potentially correct urban thermal anisotropy

    Assessing the accuracy of the MODIS LAI 1-km product in southeastern United States loblolly pine plantations: Accounting for measurement variance from ground to satellite

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    Leaf area index (LAI), defined here as one-half of the total leaf area per unit ground surface area (Chen, 1996), has been estimated at a global scale from spectral data processed from the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) sensor aboard two NASA EOS-AM spacecraft, Terra (launched in 1999) and Aqua (launched in 2002). The MOD15A2 LAI product is a 1 km global data product composited over an 8-day period and is derived from a three-dimensional radiative transfer model driven by an atmosphere corrected surface reflectance product (MOD09), a land cover product (MOD12) and ancillary information on surface characteristics. The United States Environmental Protection Agency (US EPA) initiated validation research (2002) in the evergreen needle leaf biome, as defined in the MOD12 classification, in a regional study located in the southeastern United States. The validation effort was prompted by the potential use of MODIS LAI inputs into atmospheric deposition and biogenic emission models developed within the US EPA Office of Research and Development. The MODIS LAI validation process involves the creation of a high spatial resolution LAI surface map, which when scaled to the MOD15A2 resolution (1 km) allowed for comparison and analysis with the 1 km MODIS LAI product. Creation of this LAI surface map involved: (1) the collection of in situ LAI measurements via indirect optical measurements, (2) the correlation of land cover specific LAI estimates with spectral values retrieved from high resolution imagery (20 m--30 m), and (3) the aggregation of these 30 m cells to 1 km spatial resolution, matching the resolution of the MODIS product and enabling a comparison of the two LAI values (Morisette et al. 2006). This research assessed the uncertainty associated with the creation of the high-resolution LAI reference map, specifically addressing uncertainty in the indirect in situ optical measurements of LAI and the uncertainty in the land cover classification process. Also addressed was the influence of vegetative understory on satellite-derived vegetation indices from the IKONOS sensor
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