High Resolution Optical Satellite Imagery
Product code: WH009
Print publication date: 10/06/2012
Earth Resources and Economic Geology, Miscellaneous non-GSL, Whittles
Type: Book (Hardback)
Binding: Hardback
ISBN: 9781849950466
Author/Edited by: Ian Dowman, Karsten Jacobsen, Gottfried Konecny and Rainer Sandau
Weight: 0.9kg
Number of pages: 256
£80.00
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This is a comprehensive guide to the characteristics and use of high resolution optical images from satellite-borne sensors, concentrating on sensors designed for mapping. It considers in detail satellites launched since 1999 with GSD of less than 1m, but also looks at sensors with a ground sample distance (GSD) of less than 15m, operational since SPOT 1.
The book explains to students, anyone working in map production and scientists working in fields other than mapping, the way in which high resolution imagery is obtained and the issues which surround its collection and use.
It deals progressively with the fundamentals of mapping from imagery, followed by the key features in the design of sensors and methods of data storage and transmission, including data compression. Subsequent chapters cover the sensors, calibration, sensor models and the methods of determining the orientation elements and extracting coordinates from the images. Rigorous orientation, use of rational polynomial coefficients (RPCs) and approximate methods are covered. Results from tests showing the accuracy which can be obtained, generation of digital elevations models, their accuracy and the production of orthoimages are included, as are image processing and data fusion. Finally, future missions and the issues which face further development are discussed.
High Resolution Optical Satellite Imagery is written by a team of acknowledged international experts and is the only comprehensive text on the subject.
Readership: A key text for advanced students, academics, researchers and practitioners in geomatics in general and remote sensing and photogrammetry in particular. It will also be a useful reference for scientists and engineers in other disciplines who use satellite imagery.