66 research outputs found

    Symposium franco-chinois de télédétection quantitative en agronomie et environnement. Bilan et perspectives de collaboration. Rapport de mission (26 au 30 mars 2000)

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    Ce rapport présente les principaux résultats d'un Symposium en Télédétection entre des équipes de chercheurs de l'INRA, du CIRAD, de l'Université de Lille et leurs homologues chinois de l'Institute of Remote Sensing Applications (IRSA) of Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), et du National Satellite Meteorological Center (NSMC). Les perspectives d'un programme de collaboration sont présentées avec deux axes majeurs correspondant à deux niveaux d'approche, régional et local en agriculture de précision. (Résumé d'auteur

    Estimation of leaf area index and its sunlit portion from DSCOVR EPIC data: theoretical basis

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    This paper presents the theoretical basis of the algorithm designed for the generation of leaf area index and diurnal course of its sunlit portion from NASA's Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) onboard NOAA's Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR). The Look-up-Table (LUT) approach implemented in the MODIS operational LAI/FPAR algorithm is adopted. The LUT, which is the heart of the approach, has been significantly modified. First, its parameterization incorporates the canopy hot spot phenomenon and recent advances in the theory of canopy spectral invariants. This allows more accurate decoupling of the structural and radiometric components of the measured Bidirectional Reflectance Factor (BRF), improves scaling properties of the LUT and consequently simplifies adjustments of the algorithm for data spatial resolution and spectral band compositions. Second, the stochastic radiative transfer equations are used to generate the LUT for all biome types. The equations naturally account for radiative effects of the three-dimensional canopy structure on the BRF and allow for an accurate discrimination between sunlit and shaded leaf areas. Third, the LUT entries are measurable, i.e., they can be independently derived from both below canopy measurements of the transmitted and above canopy measurements of reflected radiation fields. This feature makes possible direct validation of the LUT, facilitates identification of its deficiencies and development of refinements. Analyses of field data on canopy structure and leaf optics collected at 18 sites in the Hyytiälä forest in southern boreal zone in Finland and hyperspectral images acquired by the EO-1 Hyperion sensor support the theoretical basis.Shared Services Center NAS

    6th Third Pole Environment Workshop

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    This report contains abstracts from the 6th Third Pole Environment Workshop, held at the Byrd Polar and Climate Research Center, on May 15-18, 2016.Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of SciencesU.S. Third Pole Environment Office, Byrd Polar and Climate Research CenterOffice of Research and Office of Academic Affairs, The Ohio State Universit

    Creating 3D city models from satellite imagery for integrated assessment and forecasting of solar energy

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    Buildings are the most prominent component in the urban environment. The geometric identification of urban buildings plays an important role in a range of urban applications, including 3D representations of buildings, energy consumption analysis, sustainable development, urban planning, risk assessment, and change detection. In particular, 3D building models can provide a comprehensive assessment of surfaces exposed to solar radiation. However, the identification of the available surfaces on urban structures and the actual locations which receive a sufficient amount of sunlight to increase installed power capacity (e.g. Photovoltaic systems) are crucial considerations for solar energy supply efficiency. Although considerable research has been devoted to detecting the rooftops of buildings, less attention has been paid to creating and completing 3D models of urban buildings. Therefore, there is a need to increase our understanding of the solar energy potential of the surfaces of building envelopes so we can formulate future adaptive energy policies for improving the sustainability of cities. The goal of this thesis was to develop a new approach to automatically model existing buildings for the exploitation of solar energy potential within an urban environment. By investigating building footprints and heights based on shadow information derived from satellite images, 3D city models were generated. Footprints were detected using a two level segmentation process: (1) the iterative graph cuts approach for determining building regions and (2) the active contour method and the adjusted-geometry parameters method for modifying the edges and shapes of the extracted building footprints. Building heights were estimated based on the simulation of artificial shadow regions using identified building footprints and solar information in the image metadata at pre-defined height increments. The difference between the actual and simulated shadow regions at every height increment was computed using the Jaccard similarity coefficient. The 3D models at the first level of detail were then obtained by extruding the building footprints based on their heights by creating image voxels and using the marching cube approach. In conclusion, 3D models of buildings can be generated solely from 2D data of the buildings’attributes in any selected urban area. The approach outperforms the past attempts, and mean error is reduced by at least 21%. Qualitative evaluations of the study illustrate that it is possible to achieve 3D building models based on satellite images with a mean error of less than 5 m. This comprehensive study allows for 3D city models to be generated in the absence of elevation attributes and additional data. Experiments revealed that this novel, automated method can be useful in a number of spatial analyses and urban sustainability applications

    Book of short Abstracts of the 11th International Symposium on Digital Earth

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    The Booklet is a collection of accepted short abstracts of the ISDE11 Symposium

    Hyperspectral Imaging for Fine to Medium Scale Applications in Environmental Sciences

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    The aim of the Special Issue “Hyperspectral Imaging for Fine to Medium Scale Applications in Environmental Sciences” was to present a selection of innovative studies using hyperspectral imaging (HSI) in different thematic fields. This intention reflects the technical developments in the last three decades, which have brought the capacity of HSI to provide spectrally, spatially and temporally detailed data, favoured by e.g., hyperspectral snapshot technologies, miniaturized hyperspectral sensors and hyperspectral microscopy imaging. The present book comprises a suite of papers in various fields of environmental sciences—geology/mineral exploration, digital soil mapping, mapping and characterization of vegetation, and sensing of water bodies (including under-ice and underwater applications). In addition, there are two rather methodically/technically-oriented contributions dealing with the optimized processing of UAV data and on the design and test of a multi-channel optical receiver for ground-based applications. All in all, this compilation documents that HSI is a multi-faceted research topic and will remain so in the future

    Semantic location extraction from crowdsourced data

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    Crowdsourced Data (CSD) has recently received increased attention in many application areas including disaster management. Convenience of production and use, data currency and abundancy are some of the key reasons for attracting this high interest. Conversely, quality issues like incompleteness, credibility and relevancy prevent the direct use of such data in important applications like disaster management. Moreover, location information availability of CSD is problematic as it remains very low in many crowd sourced platforms such as Twitter. Also, this recorded location is mostly related to the mobile device or user location and often does not represent the event location. In CSD, event location is discussed descriptively in the comments in addition to the recorded location (which is generated by means of mobile device's GPS or mobile communication network). This study attempts to semantically extract the CSD location information with the help of an ontological Gazetteer and other available resources. 2011 Queensland flood tweets and Ushahidi Crowd Map data were semantically analysed to extract the location information with the support of Queensland Gazetteer which is converted to an ontological gazetteer and a global gazetteer. Some preliminary results show that the use of ontologies and semantics can improve the accuracy of place name identification of CSD and the process of location information extraction

    CIRA annual report FY 2013/2014

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    Earth Resources: A continuing bibliography with indexes

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    This bibliography lists 475 reports, articles and other documents introduced into the NASA scientific and technical information system between January 1 and March 31, 1984. Emphasis is placed on the use of remote sensing and geophysical instrumentation in spacecraft and aircraft to survey and inventory natural resources and urban areas. Subject matter is grouped according to agriculture and forestry, environmental changes and cultural resources, geodesy and cartography, geology and mineral resources, hydrology and water management, data processing and distribution systems, instrumentation and sensors, and economical analysis

    Going hyperspectral: the 'unseen' captured?

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    All objects, name them soil, water, trees, vegetation, structures, metals, paints or fabrics, create a unique spectral fingerprint. A sensor determines these fingerprints by measuring reflected light, most of which registers in wavelengths, or bands, invisible to humans. This is what the crime scene investigation (CSI) television programs have popularized how DNA or fingerprints can be used to solve crimes. Similarly, forest CSI of “seeing” the trees in the deep high mountain tropical forest is now a major focus in the air and spaceborne hyperspectral sensing technology and in other different applications such as agriculture, environment, geology, transportation, security, and several others. The availability of sub-meter resolution colour imagery from satellites coupled with internet based services like Google Earth and Microsoft Virtual Earth have resulted in an enormous interest in remote sensing among the general public. The ability to see one’s home or familiar landmarks in an image taken from hundreds of kilometers above the earth elicits wonder and awe. Deciding where, when, what and how to sense or measure the DNA of individual trees from the air or space is a crucial question in the sustainable development and management of our Malaysian tropical forest ecosystems. However, to monitor, quantify, map and understand the content and nature of our forest, one would ideally like to monitor it everywhere and all the time too. This is impossible, and consequently, forest engineers must select relatively very high to high near to real time resolution sensors with the ability to transcend boundaries, capabilities, features and interfacing realms for such measurement. The dynamic interplay of these elements is precisely coordinated by signaling networks that orchestrate their interactions. High-throughput experimental and analytical techniques now provide forest engineers with incredibly rich and potentially revealing datasets from both air and spaceborne hyperspectral sensors (also known as imaging spectrometers). However, it is impossible to exhaustively explore the full experimental and operational hyperspectral sensors available in the market out there and so forest engineers must judiciously choose which one is the best to perform and fulfill their project objectives and missions. The complexity and high-dimensionality of these systems makes it incredibly difficult for forest engineers and other users alone to manage and optimize sensing processes. In order to add or derive value from a hyperspectral remotely sensed image several factors such as resolution, swath, and signal to noise ratio, amongst others need to be considered. A grand challenge for the forest engineer’s scientific discovery in the 21st Century is therefore, to devise very high real-time ultra-spatial and spectral air and space borne sensors that automatically measure and adapt sensing operations in large-scale and economical systems with the unseen captured. This lecture therefore focuses on the emerging theory, origin of the hyperspectral sensors, research, practice, limitations and identifies future challenge and outlook of hyperspectral sensing systems in the quest towards a sustainable Malaysian forestry context and other different applications to capture the “unseen”. It is quite certain that advances in hyperspectral remote sensing and more sophisticated analytical methods will resolve any “unseen” issues in time with the best approach of transcending boundaries and interfacing remote sensing data with precise information from the field plots. Unfortunately, as a relatively new analytical technique, the full potential of air and spaceborne hyperspectral imaging has not yet been realized in Malaysi
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