Title :
TIMS observation of surface emissivity in HAPEX-Sahel
Author :
Schmugge, Thomas ; Hook, S. ; Khale, A.
Author_Institution :
USDA-ARS Hydrology Lab., Beltsville, MD, USA
Abstract :
The Thermal Infrared Multispectral Scanner (TIMS) was flown on the NASA C-130 aircraft for a series of 12 flights during HAPEX-Sahel at altitudes ranging from 0.25 to 6 km (0.6 to 15 m ground resolution). TIMS provides coverage of the 8 to 12 micrometer thermal infrared band in 6 contiguous channels. Thus it is possible to observe the spectral behavior of the surface emissivity over this wavelength interval. A high resolution image, 1.5 m, of the west central site on 2 September was processed and the spectral behaviors of the millet and fallow grassland sites were determined. There was a 4 to 5K difference in the brightness temperature over the 6 channels when significant bare soil was visible. Channels 1 to 3 (8.2 to 9.4 μm) were 4-5K cooler than the longer wavelength channels which is characteristic of soils rich in quartz. These differences in brightness were converted to emissivity differences using both the emissivity normalization and alpha residuals methods. Both methods yielded about the same difference in emissivity over the 6 channels, i.e. 0.09. However the alpha residuals methods yielded higher values. As expected for a group of vegetated pixels, there was little difference in emissivity, less than 0.02, and the average amplitude was 0.99. The extracted vegetation temperature was close to the air temperature
Keywords :
geophysical techniques; infrared imaging; remote sensing; terrestrial heat; 8 to 12 mum; Africa; HAPEX Sahel; IR imaging; IR radiometry; Niger; TIMS observation; Thermal Infrared Multispectral Scanner; bare soil; desert land surface; fallow grassland; geophysical measurement technique; geothermal; infrared; millet; multispectral method; optical imaging; remote sensing; spectra; surface emissivity; terrain mapping; terrestrial heat; tropical region; vegetation mapping; Aircraft propulsion; Area measurement; Atmospheric measurements; Brightness temperature; Land surface; Land surface temperature; NASA; Remote sensing; Soil measurements; Vegetation;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 1995. IGARSS '95. 'Quantitative Remote Sensing for Science and Applications', International
Conference_Location :
Firenze
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-2567-2
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.1995.524154