Title :
Analysis of diurnal, long-wave hyperspectral measurements of natural background and manmade targets under different weather conditions
Author :
Borel, Christoph ; Rosario, Dalton ; Romano, Joao
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Eng. Phys., Air Force Inst. of Technol., Wright-Patterson AFB, OH, USA
Abstract :
In this paper we describe the end-to-end processing of image Fourier Transform spectrometry data taken at Picatinny Arsenal in New Jersey with the long-wave hyperspectral camera from Telops. The first part of the paper discusses the processing from raw data to calibrated radiance and emissivity data. Data was taken during several months under different weather conditions every 6 minutes from a 213ft high tower of surrogate tank targets for a project sponsored by the Army Research Laboratory in Adelphi, MD. An automatic calibration and analysis program was developed which creates calibrated data files and HTML files. The first processing stage is a flat-fielding. During this step the mean base line is used to find dead pixels (baseline low or at the maximum). Noisy pixels are detected where the standard deviation over the part of the interferogram. A flat-fielded and bad pixel corrected calibration cube using the gain and offset determined by a single blackbody measurement is created. In the second stage each flat-fielded cube is Fourier transformed and a 2-point radiometric calibration is performed. For selected cubes a temperature-emissivity separation algorithm is applied. The second part discusses environmental effects such as diurnal and seasonal atmospheric and temperature changes and the effect of cloud cover on the data. To test the effect of environmental conditions the range-invariant anomaly detection approach is applied to calibrated radiance, brightness temperature and emissivity data.
Keywords :
Fourier transform spectroscopy; atmospheric radiation; atmospheric temperature; calibration; clouds; emissivity; hypermedia markup languages; radiometry; 2-point radiometric calibration; Adelphi; Army Research Laboratory; HTML file; Maryland; New Jersey; Picatinny Arsenal; Telops; automatic analysis program; automatic calibration program; bad pixel corrected calibration cube; brightness temperature; calibrated data file; calibrated radiance data; cloud cover effect; dead pixel; diurnal atmospheric change; diurnal hyperspectral measurement analysis; diurnal temperature change; emissivity data; end-to-end processing; environmental condition effect; environmental effect; flat-fielded corrected calibration cube; flat-fielding processing stage; image Fourier Transform spectrometry data; long-wave hyperspectral camera; long-wave hyperspectral measurement analysis; manmade target; mean base line; natural background; noisy pixel; range-invariant anomaly detection approach; raw data processing; seasonal atmospheric change; seasonal temperature change; single blackbody measurement; standard deviation; surrogate tank target high tower; temperature-emissivity separation algorithm; weather condition; Algorithm design and analysis; Atmospheric measurements; Brightness temperature; Calibration; Hyperspectral imaging; Temperature measurement; Temperature sensors; Fourier transform spectrometr; anomaly detection; temperature emissivity separation;
Conference_Titel :
Applied Imagery Pattern Recognition Workshop (AIPR), 2014 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Washington, DC
DOI :
10.1109/AIPR.2014.7041903