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Showing posts with label Image Interpretation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Image Interpretation. Show all posts

Friday, 9 October 2020

Remote Sensing Image Fusion, pdf eBook


Preface of the Book



Nowadays, approximately four TB of image data are collected daily by instruments mounted on satellite platforms, not to mention the data produced by a myriad of specific campaigns carried out through airborne instruments. Very high-resolution (VHR) multispectral scanners, IKONOS, QuickBird, GeoEye,WorldView, Pl ́eiades, just to mention the most popular, and especially the related monospectral panchromatic instruments are responsible for a large part of the amount.

Sunday, 7 July 2019

AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY AND IMAGE INTERPRETATION



AERIAL PHOTOGRAPHY AND IMAGE INTERPRETATION



CONTENTS
Preface xi 1
Introduction 1

PART 1 GEOMETRY AND PHOTO MEASUREMENTS 25
2 Geometry of a Vertical Aerial Photograph 27
3 Principles of Stereoscopic Vision 44
4 Scale of a Vertical Aerial Photograph 68
5 Horizontal Measurements—Distance, Bearings, and Areas 86
6 Vertical Measurements 105
7 Acquisition of Aerial Photography 131

Thursday, 4 July 2019

Multispectral Image Analysis Using the Object-Oriented Paradigm



Multispectral Image Analysis Using the Object-Oriented Paradigm




Preface
This book is intended for students, research scientists, and professionals in the remote sensing industry who have a basic understanding of remote sensing principles, image processing, and applications of remotely sensed data. This book will appeal to users who apply imagery to a variety of mapping applications, including vegetation mapping, identification of man-made structures from imagery, mapping of urban growth patterns, and other applications. I wrote this book keeping in mind users with diverse educational backgrounds. 

Tuesday, 23 April 2019

The IMAGE PROCESSING Handbook,5th Edition



The IMAGE PROCESSING Handbook,5th Edition



Preface
Image processing is used in a wide variety of applications for two somewhat different
purposes:


Improving the visual appearance of images to a human viewer, including their printing and transmission Preparing images for the measurement of the features and structures that they reveal
The techniques that are appropriate for each of these tasks are not always the same, but there is considerable overlap. This book covers methods that are used for both tasks.
To do the best possible job, it is important to know about the uses to which the processed images will be put. For visual enhancement, this means having some familiarity with the human visual process and an appreciation of what cues the viewer responds to in an image. In this edition of the book, a chapter on that subject has been added.


Sunday, 3 March 2019

Imagery and GIS

Best Practices for Extracting Information from Imagery

Introduction 


Why Imagery and GIS? Imagery—it allures and fascinates us; its measurements inform us. It draws us in to explore, analyze, and understand our world.
Imagery and GIS



 First comes the astonishment of its raw beauty—the enormity of a hurricane, the stark glaciers in Greenland, the delicate branching of a redwood’s lidar profile, a jagged edge of a fault line in radar, the vivid greens of the tropics, the determined lines of human impact, the rebirth of Mount Saint Helens’ forests, the jiggly wiggly croplands of Asia and Africa, the lost snows of Kilimanjaro. Each image entices us to discover more, to look again and again. Then we start to ask questions. Why do trees no longer grow here? Can trees grow here again? How much has this city expanded?

Saturday, 16 February 2019

Image Interpretation in Geology

Remote sensing roughly means extending human sensory perception to distances greater than we can achieve unaided and to information that is far beyond our physiological capabilities. 

Image Interpretation in Geology
Vision is far and away our most powerful and flexible sense, and so the strict focus is on capturing information about the Earth's properties in the nearly continuous, two-dimensional fashion that is characteristic of images. This is possible only for those properties that control how Earth materials interact with electromagnetic radiation-not only visible light, but a spectrum that extends from gamma- to microwave radiation. Other attributes relenting to natural variations in density, magnetic and electrical properties are detectable, but only in a discontinuous fashion-from point to point or along surveyed lines. The same holds for variations in chemistry, topographic elevation and the geometric structure of rocks, both at and beneath the surface, plus a host of other kinds of geological information. Although some of these attributes can be measured from a distance, the immediate results are not images.They are not excluded from the book, however, because there are means of recasting numbers distributed irregularly in two cartographic dimensions into the form of images. Visual perception is unsurpassed in extracting nuances from any kind of image, whatever its means
of derivation. So, there is an overlap between remote sensing and more familiar means of gathering geo-scientific information. Part of it is through images, and part through data analysis itself. One of the most important new tools is using computers to find patterns and correlations among far more layers of information than the human intellect can grasp. We deal as a matter of routine with spatial and to a lesser extent time dimensions, but a geological problem often involves tens of different dimensions.
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Sunday, 20 January 2019

Book: Remote Sensing and Image Interpretation, 7th edition




Book: Remote Sensing and Image Interpretation, 7th edition



PREFACE OF THE BOOK

This book is designed to be primarily used in two ways: as a textbook in introductory courses in remote sensing and image interpretation and as a reference for the burgeoning number of practitioners who use geospatial information and analysis in their work. Rapid advances in computational power and sensor design are
allowing remote sensing and its kindred technologies, such as geographic information systems (GIS) and the Global Positioning System (GPS), to play an increasingly important role in science, engineering, resource management, commerce, and other fields of human endeavor.

Image Processing and GIS for Remote Sensing Techniques and applications

Jian Guo Liu and Philippa J. Mason 
Department of Earth Science and Engineering, Imperial College London Second Edition






Overview of the book
Remote sensing is a mechanism for collecting raster data or images, and remotely sensed images represent an objective record of the spectrum relating to the earth surface materials. Information extraction from physical properties and chemical composition of the those images is, on the other hand, an entirely foci will derive very different thematic information subjective process. People with differing application from the same source image.



Image processing thus For more in‐depth analysis, the images need to be becomes a vital tool for the extraction of thematic and/or quantitative information from raw image data. analysed in conjunction with other complementary truth’ data, logistical and infrastructure information; data, such as existing thematic maps of topography, geomorphology, geology and landuse, or with geochemical and geophysical survey data, or ‘ground and so here comes GIS, a highly sophisticated tool for to be covered in one book. As illustrated in Fig. 0.1, our the management, display and analysis of all kinds of spatially referenced information. Remote sensing, image processing and GIS are all extremely broad subjects in their own right; far too broad.



The application cases are biased toward the earth sciences but the image processing and GIS techniques are book is aimed at the overlap between the three disciplines, providing an overview of essential techniques and a selection of case studies in a variety of application areas, emphasizing the close relationship between them.generic and independent of any software, and therefore and with conceptual illustrations. For image processing transferable skills suited to all applications.The book has been written with university students and lecturers in mind as a principal textbook. For students’ needs in particular, we have tried to convey knowledge in simple words, with clear explanations much mathematical detail. The result is intended to be and GIS, mathematics is unavoidable, but we understand that this may be off‐putting for some. To minimize such effects, we try to emphasize the concepts, explaining in common sense terms rather than in too a comprehensive yet ‘easy learning’ solution to a fairly challenging topic. 



There are sections providing extended coverage of some necessary mathematics and advanced materials for use by course tutors and lecturers; these sections will be marked as such. Hence the book is written for both students and teachers. With many author‐developed techniques and recent research case studies, it is also an excellent reference book for higher level readers including researchers and professionals in remote sensing application sectors. In this book, we have presented a unique combination of tools, techniques and applications that we hope will be of use to the full breadth of geoscientific and remote sensing communities. 



The book begins with the fundamentals of the core image processing tools used in remote sensing and GIS with adequate mathematical details in Part I, then it becomes slightly more applied and less mathematical in Part II to cover the wide scope of GIS where many of those core image processing tools are used in different contexts. Part III contains the entirely applied part of the book, where we describe a selection of cases where image processing and GIS have been used, by the authors, in teaching, research and industrial projects in which there is a dominant remote sensing component. Since the publication of the first edition in 2009, we have been pleasantly delighted and encouraged by the interest in this book, and comments from students and colleagues alike have stimulated us to produce this second edition. 

In making the explanations of the book generic and not tied to any particular software, we attempted to ‘future‐proof’ its content in the first edition. Inevitably, however, there are many small things that have needed to be updated in this second edition. We have implemented minor updates to all the main chapters in Parts I and II. A completely new chapter on sub‐pixel technology and image phase correlation has been added in Part I (Chapter 11), which is based on new and ongoing research in this area. Part  III has been considerably enhanced with more recent case studies to include new data and/or other new complementary research where relevant. We also take this opportunity to acknowledge the many data sources that we have made use of in this book. These include NASA’s 40‐year Landsat archive (without which much of our daily work would be impossible), ESA radar image archive (ERS and Envisat), Aster GDEM and SRTM global elevation data, ESRI’s online knowledge base, and the NERC (Natural Environment Research Council, UK) airborne campaign (Airborne Thematic Mapper). Images are both the principal input and product of remote sensing and GIS, and they are meant to be visualised! The e‐version of the book therefore now contains hyperlinks to high resolution digital versions of the images and illustrations, allowing the reader to examine the details at pixel level and to appreciate the effects of particular processing techniques such as filtering, image fusion, and so forth.



Download Link
Book:Image Processing and GIS for Remote Sensing Techniques and applications


Thursday, 17 January 2019

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