Title :
Quantitative detection of sediment dust analog over green canopy using airborne hyperspectral imagery
Author :
Brook, Anna ; Ben-dor, Eyal
Author_Institution :
Remote Sensing Lab., Tel-Aviv Univ., Tel-Aviv, Israel
Abstract :
A smart unmixing approach for quantitative detection of small amounts of dust that settle on the vegetation canopy using hyperspectral (HRS) airborne imagery data is proposed. A dust analog composed of Alumina (Aluminum Oxide Al2O3) powder was artificially spread over vegetation that covered 4 × 4 pixels of the AISA-Dual sensor. The alumina spectral signal could not be extracted using ordinary methods such as supervised classification (e.g. SAM or MTMF), unsupervised classification (Maximum Likelihood or Minimum Distance), and linear unmixing (e.g. MESMA or VCA). Considering the limitations of the above methods for extracting endmembers in a nonlinear domain, we developed a new approach that is capable of detecting the alumina powder from HRS imagery covering the VIS-NIR-SWIR (400-2400 nm) spectral regions. This step wised approach is based on a sequence merge between a decision tree algorithm, several spectral indices and a flexible constrained nonlinear unmixing method. The endmember vectors and abundances are obtained through a gradient-based optimization approach. Ground-truth examination of the results showed that the method is reliable and that it may represent a new frontier for assessing sediment dust contamination on a dark background via airborne sensors.
Keywords :
aluminium compounds; decision trees; dust; geophysical image processing; gradient methods; optimisation; remote sensing; vegetation; AISA-Dual sensor; Al2O3; airborne hyperspectral imagery; alumina powder; alumina spectral signal; decision tree algorithm; endmember extraction; endmember vectors; flexible constrained nonlinear unmixing method; gradient based optimisation; green canopy; nonlinear domain; sediment dust analog quantitative detection; sequence merge; smart unmixing approach; spectral index; step wise approach; vegetation canopy; wavelength 400 nm to 2400 nm; Classification algorithms; Hyperspectral imaging; Pixel; Reflectivity; Vegetation mapping; Decision Tree Algorithm; Detection of Sediment Dust; Quantitative mapping; Unmixing;
Conference_Titel :
Hyperspectral Image and Signal Processing: Evolution in Remote Sensing (WHISPERS), 2010 2nd Workshop on
Conference_Location :
Reykjavik
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8906-0
Electronic_ISBN :
978-1-4244-8907-7
DOI :
10.1109/WHISPERS.2010.5594842