DocumentCode :
677154
Title :
Effects of topographic corrections on MODIS sensor satellite imagery of mountainous region
Author :
Singh, Sushil ; Talwar, Rajneesh
Author_Institution :
Electron. Eng., Punjab Tech. Univ., Rasulpur, India
fYear :
2013
fDate :
12-14 Dec. 2013
Firstpage :
455
Lastpage :
460
Abstract :
Geographic Information System (GIS) plays a vital role in collecting or analyzing land-use/cover change information for environmental impacts and infrastructure management. One of the major problem associated with high spatial resolution (56 square meter/pixel) sensors such as AWiFS that is characterized by low temporal resolution (5 days/cycle), limits the application of remote sensing. The medium spatial resolution (250 square meter/pixel) sensors such as MODIS (1-2 days/cycle), have resolved the problem of low temporal resolution up to a great extent by compromising with spatial resolution. It enhanced the capability of remote sensing to deliver data of larger areas on daily basis. To enhance raw satellite imagery, the preprocessing corrections are crucial to make it appropriate for a specific application such as change detection, resource monitoring or classification etc. It comprises geometric corrections, radiometric correction or atmospheric correction for flat surface terrain. But for mountainous region, topographic corrections are also necessary to be performed on satellite imagery before further consideration. The prominence of topographic corrections are very rarely investigated on land cover mountainous region using MODIS imagery. In present paper, necessary preprocessing corrections along with topographic corrections implemented on MODIS sensor satellite imagery of mountainous region. The consequences are validated by realizing preprocessed topographically corrected and without topographically corrected MODIS sensor satellite imageries on supervised Maximum Likelihood Classifier (MLC). Experiments outcomes confirms that topographically corrected MLC classified imagery achieved better results as compare to MLC classified imagery without topographic correction. It is expected that this instigated paper report on different preprocessing phases of satellite imagery delivers an effective guidance to algorithm designers for accurately use the diverse and com- lex remotely sensed data of flat as well as mountainous or rugged surface.
Keywords :
geographic information systems; geophysical image processing; image classification; image enhancement; remote sensing; AWiFS; GIS; MLC; MODIS sensor satellite imagery; atmospheric correction; change detection; environmental impacts; flat surface terrain; geographic information system; geometric corrections; infrastructure management; land-use-cover change information analysis; low temporal resolution; medium spatial resolution; mountainous region; radiometric correction; raw satellite imagery enhancement; remote sensing; resource monitoring; supervised maximum likelihood classifier; topographic correction effect; topographic corrections; Accuracy; Image sensors; MODIS; Reflectivity; Satellite broadcasting; Satellites; Sensors; MODIS pre-processing; atmospheric corrections; geometric corrections; radiometric corrections; topographic corrections;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Signal Processing and Communication (ICSC), 2013 International Conference on
Conference_Location :
Noida
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4799-1605-4
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/ICSPCom.2013.6719833
Filename :
6719833
Link To Document :
بازگشت