339 research outputs found
A Novel Rate Control Algorithm for Onboard Predictive Coding of Multispectral and Hyperspectral Images
Predictive coding is attractive for compression onboard of spacecrafts thanks
to its low computational complexity, modest memory requirements and the ability
to accurately control quality on a pixel-by-pixel basis. Traditionally,
predictive compression focused on the lossless and near-lossless modes of
operation where the maximum error can be bounded but the rate of the compressed
image is variable. Rate control is considered a challenging problem for
predictive encoders due to the dependencies between quantization and prediction
in the feedback loop, and the lack of a signal representation that packs the
signal's energy into few coefficients. In this paper, we show that it is
possible to design a rate control scheme intended for onboard implementation.
In particular, we propose a general framework to select quantizers in each
spatial and spectral region of an image so as to achieve the desired target
rate while minimizing distortion. The rate control algorithm allows to achieve
lossy, near-lossless compression, and any in-between type of compression, e.g.,
lossy compression with a near-lossless constraint. While this framework is
independent of the specific predictor used, in order to show its performance,
in this paper we tailor it to the predictor adopted by the CCSDS-123 lossless
compression standard, obtaining an extension that allows to perform lossless,
near-lossless and lossy compression in a single package. We show that the rate
controller has excellent performance in terms of accuracy in the output rate,
rate-distortion characteristics and is extremely competitive with respect to
state-of-the-art transform coding
Multiband and Lossless Compression of Hyperspectral Images
Hyperspectral images are widely used in several real-life applications. In this paper, we investigate on the compression of hyperspectral images by considering different aspects, including the optimization of the computational complexity in order to allow implementations on limited hardware (i.e., hyperspectral sensors, etc.). We present an approach that relies on a three-dimensional predictive structure. Our predictive structure, 3D-MBLP, uses one or more previous bands as references to exploit the redundancies among the third dimension. The achieved results are comparable, and often better, with respect to the other state-of-art lossless compression techniques for hyperspectral images
Lossless compression of hyperspectral images
Band ordering and the prediction scheme are the two major aspects of hyperspectral imaging which have been studied to improve the performance of the compression system. In the prediction module, we propose spatio-spectral prediction methods. Two non-linear spectral prediction methods have been proposed in this thesis. NPHI (Non-linear Prediction for Hyperspectral Images) is based on a band look-ahead technique wherein a reference band is included in the prediction of pixels in the current band. The prediction technique estimates the variation between the contexts of the two bands to modify the weights computed in the reference band to predict the pixels in the current band. EPHI (Edge-based Prediction for Hyperspectral Images) is the modified NPHI technique wherein an edge-based analysis is used to classify the pixels into edges and non-edges in order to perform the prediction of the pixel in the current band. Three ordering methods have been proposed in this thesis. The first ordering method computes the local and global features in each band to group the bands. The bands in each group are ordered by estimating the compression ratios achieved between the entire band in the group and then ordering them using Kruskal\u27s algorithm. The other two methods of ordering compute the compression ratios between b-neighbors in performing the band ordering
Statistical Atmospheric Parameter Retrieval Largely Benefits from Spatial-Spectral Image Compression
The Infrared Atmospheric Sounding Interferometer
(IASI) is flying on board of the Metop satellite series, which is
part of the EUMETSAT Polar System (EPS). Products obtained
from IASI data represent a significant improvement in the
accuracy and quality of the measurements used for meteorological models. Notably, IASI collects rich spectral information to
derive temperature and moisture profiles –among other relevant
trace gases–, essential for atmospheric forecasts and for the
understanding of weather. Here, we investigate the impact of
near-lossless and lossy compression on IASI L1C data when
statistical retrieval algorithms are later applied. We search for
those compression ratios that yield a positive impact on the
accuracy of the statistical retrievals. The compression techniques
help reduce certain amount of noise on the original data and,
at the same time, incorporate spatial-spectral feature relations in
an indirect way without increasing the computational complexity.
We observed that compressing images, at relatively low bitrates, improves results in predicting temperature and dew point
temperature, and we advocate that some amount of compression
prior to model inversion is beneficial. This research can benefit
the development of current and upcoming retrieval chains in
infrared sounding and hyperspectral sensors
Adaptive multispectral GPU accelerated architecture for Earth Observation satellites
In recent years the growth in quantity, diversity and capability of Earth Observation (EO) satellites, has enabled increase’s in the achievable payload data dimensionality and volume. However, the lack of equivalent advancement in downlink technology has resulted in the development of an onboard data bottleneck. This bottleneck must be alleviated in order for EO satellites to continue to efficiently provide high quality and increasing quantities of payload data. This research explores the selection and implementation of state-of-the-art multidimensional image compression algorithms and proposes a new onboard data processing architecture, to help alleviate the bottleneck and increase the data throughput of the platform. The proposed new system is based upon a backplane architecture to provide scalability with different satellite platform sizes and varying mission’s objectives. The heterogeneous nature of the architecture allows benefits of both Field Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) and Graphical Processing Unit (GPU) hardware to be leveraged for maximised data processing throughput
Constant-SNR, rate control and entropy coding for predictive lossy hyperspectral image compression
Predictive lossy compression has been shown to represent a very flexible framework for lossless and lossy onboard compression of multispectral and hyperspectral images with quality and rate control. In this paper, we improve predictive lossy compression in several ways, using a standard issued by the Consultative Committee on Space Data Systems, namely CCSDS-123, as an example of application. First, exploiting the flexibility in the error control process, we propose a constant-signal-to-noise-ratio algorithm that bounds the maximum relative error between each pixel of the reconstructed image and the corresponding pixel of the original image. This is very useful to avoid low-energy areas of the image being affected by large errors. Second, we propose a new rate control algorithm that has very low complexity and provides performance equal to or better than existing work. Third, we investigate several entropy coding schemes that can speed up the hardware implementation of the algorithm and, at the same time, improve coding efficiency. These advances make predictive lossy compression an extremely appealing framework for onboard systems due to its simplicity, flexibility, and coding efficiency
The CCSDS 123.0-B-2 Low-Complexity Lossless and Near-Lossless Multispectral and Hyperspectral Image Compression Standard: A comprehensive review
The Consultative Committee for Space Data Systems (CCSDS) published the CCSDS 123.0-B-2, “Low- Complexity Lossless and Near-Lossless Multispectral and Hyperspectral Image Compression” standard. This standard extends the previous issue, CCSDS 123.0-B-1, which supported only lossless compression, while maintaining backward compatibility. The main novelty of the new issue is support for near-lossless compression, i.e., lossy compression with user-defined absolute and/or relative error limits in the reconstructed images. This new feature is achieved via closed-loop quantization of prediction errors. Two further additions arise from the new near lossless support: first, the calculation of predicted sample values using sample representatives that may not be equal to the reconstructed sample values, and, second, a new hybrid entropy coder designed to provide enhanced compression performance for low-entropy data, prevalent when non lossless compression is used. These new features enable significantly smaller compressed data volumes than those achievable with CCSDS 123.0-B-1 while controlling the quality of the decompressed images. As a result, larger amounts of valuable information can be retrieved given a set of bandwidth and energy consumption constraints
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