DocumentCode
2145165
Title
Differences in grass-shrub transition zone canopy composition from CHRIS/Proba multi-angle data
Author
Chopping, Mark ; Snyder, Cindy ; Laliberte, Andrea ; Rango, Albert ; Maxwell, Connie
Author_Institution
Earth & Environ. Studies, Montclair State Univ., NJ
Volume
7
fYear
2004
fDate
20-24 Sept. 2004
Firstpage
4746
Abstract
The surface spectral-directional reflectance of a grass-shrub transition zone at 631 nm was estimated from spectral radiance images in a narrow (~10 nm wide) band recorded by the Compact High Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (CHRIS) flown on the European Space Agency´s Proba micro-satellite. An experimental satellite-borne sensor developed by Sira Electro-Optics Ltd. (UK), CHRIS is one of the few sources of multi-angular reflectance data on kilometer scales, providing up to five looks in different directions at a given target within the space of a few minutes. For a selected December 23, 2003 overpass, orbital ephemeris were used to obtain the viewing geometry for the set of four available images. The images were resampled to a consistent 25 m grid and used to invert a simple geometric bidirectional reflectance distribution (BRDF) model for plant number density, plant width, and plant height. The retrieved parameters were compared to subsets of high resolution aerial photographs. The inversions did not always result in the expected parameter behavior and further work is required to determine the underlying reasons, which may include decoupling model parameter response to brightness and anisotropy
Keywords
geophysical signal processing; image resolution; image retrieval; vegetation mapping; 10 nm; 25 m; 631 nm; AD 2003 12 23; BRDF; CHRIS; CHRIS/Proba multiangle data; Compact High Resolution Imaging Spectrometer; European Space Agency Proba microsatellite; Sira Electro-Optics Ltd; UK; aerial photograph; brightness; decoupling model parameter response; geometric bidirectional reflectance distribution; grass-shrub transition zone canopy composition; image resolution; orbital ephemeris; plant height; plant number density; plant width; retrieved parameter; satellite-borne sensor; spectral radiance image; surface spectral-directional reflectance; viewing geometry; Biological system modeling; Brightness; Earth; Electrooptic devices; High-resolution imaging; Reflectivity; Remote monitoring; Spatial resolution; Spectroscopy; US Department of Agriculture;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2004. IGARSS '04. Proceedings. 2004 IEEE International
Conference_Location
Anchorage, AK
Print_ISBN
0-7803-8742-2
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2004.1370219
Filename
1370219
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