DocumentCode :
3561424
Title :
Adaptive Sky: From Instrument Pixels to a Sensor Web Gestalt
Author :
Garay, Michael J. ; Burl, Michael C.
Author_Institution :
Raytheon Co., Pasadena, CA, USA
Volume :
3
Issue :
4
fYear :
2010
Firstpage :
481
Lastpage :
487
Abstract :
A variety of sensors have been developed and deployed to monitor the Earth, ranging from in situ seismographic networks to hyperspectral imaging instruments carried onboard NASA satellites. Despite an impressive collection of sensing assets, there is still much untapped potential, as evidenced by the limited number of studies that successfully employ high-resolution data from multiple instruments. Sensor webs offer the potential to go beyond simple data fusion by dynamically combining sensing assets into coordinated, multi-instrument observers of specific geophysical objects, phenomena, and processes. In this paper, we describe Adaptive Sky, an algorithm package for sensor webs developed through funding from the NASA Earth Science Technology Office under the Advanced Information Systems Technology program. Fundamentally, Adaptive Sky aims to relate the observations from one sensor at time t to the observations from another sensor at time t´, providing a “gestalt,” or unified, perspective that is more than the sum of its parts. A scenario involving the eruption of Bezymianny Volcano on the remote Kamchatka Peninsula on 14 October 2007 demonstrates conceptually how Adaptive Sky can be leveraged to create unprecedented spatio-temporal and phenomenological coverage of a complex geophysical event of interest, despite limitations inherent in the individual sensors.
Keywords :
distributed sensors; geophysical image processing; geophysical techniques; information networks; remote sensing; seismometers; sensor fusion; software packages; AD 2007 10 14; Adaptive Sky; Advanced Information Systems Technology program; Bezymianny Volcano; Kamchatka Peninsula; NASA Earth Science Technology Office; NASA satellites; gestalt; hyperspectral imaging instruments; in situ seismographic networks; instrument pixels; phenomenological coverage; sensor web; spatiotemporal coverage; Earth; Hyperspectral imaging; Hyperspectral sensors; Image sensors; Instruments; Monitoring; NASA; Satellites; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Space technology; Image analysis; image segmentation; intelligent systems; multisensor systems; object detection; remote sensing; software packages;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing, IEEE Journal of
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Location :
7/8/2010 12:00:00 AM
ISSN :
1939-1404
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/JSTARS.2010.2052790
Filename :
5503975
Link To Document :
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