RS - 5 & 6 - Platforms - & - Sensors
RS - 5 & 6 - Platforms - & - Sensors
Topic 5/6:
RS Platforms and sensors
Remote sensing platforms
Sensors
• A remote sensor is a device that measures
and records electromagnetic energy.
• In remote sensing a sensor is normally
mounted on a platform.
• passive sensors: RS
systems which measure
energy that is naturally
available.
• This means that passive
sensors (with the exception
of thermal sensors) can only
record energy when the sun
is illuminating the earth
Active Sensors
• These provide their own energy for illumination.
• The sensor emits radiation which is directed toward the
target to be investigated.
• The radiation reflected from that target is detected and
measured by the sensor.
Active Sensors cont.
• Advantages for active sensors include
– the ability to obtain measurements anytime, regardless of the
time of day or season.
– Active sensors can be used for examining wavelengths that are
not sufficiently provided by the sun, such as microwaves,
– to better control the way a target is illuminated.
• Disadvantage:
– active systems require the generation of a fairly large amount of
energy to adequately illuminate targets.
D = H’ β
where
D = diameter of circular ground area viewed
H' = flying height above terrain
β = IFOV of system (expressed in radians)
• The further up you go, the more ground you can cover,
but with a lower level of detail.
Platforms: Satellites
• Satellites: Objects which revolve around other objects
• They provide a great deal of the RS imagery commonly
used today.
• Satellites permit repetitive coverage of the Earth’s
surface on a continuing basis.
• Unique characteristics which make them useful are orbit
and swath
Satellite Orbits
• An Orbit refers to the path followed by a satellite
Inclination angle:
• angle in degrees between the orbit and the equator.
• This together with the field of view of the sensor, determines
which latitudes can be observed, e.g. if the inclination is 60°
then the satellite flies over the earth between 60° south and 60°
north.
Orbit Characteristics
Period:
• Time required to complete one full orbit.
• The speed of the platform has implication on the type of images
that can be acquired.
Repeat Cycle:
• Time in days between two successive identical orbits.
• The time between two subsequent images of the same area
(revisit time) is determined by the repeat cycle together with the
pointing capability of the sensor.
– Pointing capability refers to the possibility of the sensor-platform to look
sideways. (Pushbroom scanners e.g. those mounted on SPOT, IRS and
Ikonos have this possibility.)
Common Orbit Types for RS missions
Polar or near polar orbit:-
• with inclination angles of between 80° and 100° and
enable observation of the whole globe. Typical orbit
altitude 600-800km.
• Platforms are designed to follow an orbit (basically
north-south) which, in conjunction with the Earth's
rotation (west-east), allows them to cover most of
the Earth's surface over a certain period of time.
Common Orbit Types for RS missions
Sun-synchronous orbit:-
• the orbit is chosen such that the satellite passes overhead
at the same local time.
• Most sun-synchronous orbits cross the equator at around
10.30hr (sun angle low, resultant shadows reveal terrain
relief).
• This ensures consistent illumination conditions when
acquiring images in a specific season over successive
years, or over a particular area over a series of days.
• This is an important factor for monitoring changes
between images or for mosaicking adjacent images
together, as they do not have to be corrected for different
illumination conditions.
Common Orbit Types for RS missions
Geostationary orbit:-
• orbits where the satellite is above the equator
(inclination angle is 0°) at a distance e.g. of 36,000km.
• Period of satellite is the same as for the earth which
implies that the satellite is at a fixed position relative to
the earth.
• It is used for meteorological and telecommunication
satellites.
– Today meteorological weather satellites use a
combination of geostationary satellites and polar
ones whereby geo-stationary offer a continuous
view, whereas polar ones offer higher resolution.
Platform Types with respect to altitude
• Satellite-borne: orbit altitude approx. 800km
• Space-borne (low Earth orbit) approx. 300km
• Airborne – flying height approx. 1-3 km
Swath
• Area (surface) of the Earth that is imaged.
• Varies between tens and hundreds of kilometres wide.
• Satellite orbits are fixed but the Earth’s rotation allows the
satellite to image new areas with consecutive passes.
Characterization of RS sensors
General characteristics of imaging RS sensors
• Spatial resolution,
• Spectral resolution
• Radiometric resolution,
• Temporal resolution
Spatial Resolution (Pixel size, scale)
• Spatial resolution refers to the
smallest possible feature that can be
detected.
• The distance between the platform
and the target determines the level of
detail and the area imaged by a
sensor.
• Spatial resolution for passive
sensors depends primarily on the
Instantaneous Field of View (IFOV) -
the angular cone of visibility of the
sensor.
• The size of the area viewed is a
product of the IFOV and the distance
between the ground and the sensor.
Spatial Resolution, Pixel size, scale
• This area on the ground is called the resolution cell
and determines a sensor's maximum spatial
resolution.
• For a homogeneous feature to be detected, its size
generally has to be equal to or larger than the
resolution cell. If the feature is smaller than this, it
may not be detectable as the average brightness of
all features in that resolution cell will be recorded.
• However, smaller features may sometimes be
detectable if their reflectance dominates within a
particular resolution cell allowing sub-pixel or
resolution cell detection.
Spatial Resolution, Pixel size, scale
• Pixels (picture elements) are the smallest units of
an image
• An image is therefore composed of a matrix of
pixels
• Pixel size (not equal) to resolution.