Mojtaba Akhoundi Khezrabad; Mohammad Javad Valadan Zoej; alireza safdari nezhad
Abstract
Due to the wide applications of hyperspectral images, economical and innovative imaging systems are developed to acquire such images. In order to use hyperspectral images, it is necessary to establish an accurate relation between the ground space and the image space, which needs numerous Ground Control ...
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Due to the wide applications of hyperspectral images, economical and innovative imaging systems are developed to acquire such images. In order to use hyperspectral images, it is necessary to establish an accurate relation between the ground space and the image space, which needs numerous Ground Control Points (GCPs). This fact highlights the need for developing geometric corrections methods for any camera design. BaySpec OCI-F (400-1000 nm) is one of the innovative cameras that acquires pushbroom hyperspectral images. In addition to the pushbroom sensor, the camera uses a frame sensor that acquires images at the same time as the pushbroom sensor and with the same temporal rate. In this article, a geometric correction method for pushbroom images of OCI-F camera is proposed. Based on the camera’s imaging design, the first step of the method determines a set of calibration parameters which geometrically relates the pushbroom and the frame sensors. Then using this relation and the geometric relations among consecutive frames, the pixels of the pushbroom scene are rearranged and form the corrected image. The proposed method determines the relation among the consecutive images via Least Square Matching (LSM) method. The results show that the correction method has decreased the geometric distortions of the raw pushbroom scene by 62.2% on average. Such a reduction causes the average accuracies of two-dimensional and three-dimensional generic models which relate image space and ground space together, to increase by 34.1% and 39.9% respectively.
Alireza Taheri Dehkordi; Mohammad Javad Valadanzouj; Alireza Safdarinezhad
Abstract
Map of croplands is one of the information layers required in the efficient management of these lands. Having such maps makes it possible to monitor agricultural fields during the growing season continuously. In this study, a solution to produce map of Shahrekord’s agricultural lands in two agricultural ...
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Map of croplands is one of the information layers required in the efficient management of these lands. Having such maps makes it possible to monitor agricultural fields during the growing season continuously. In this study, a solution to produce map of Shahrekord’s agricultural lands in two agricultural and non-agricultural classes is presented using the time series of different extracted indices from Sentinel-2 images. Since the use of large data sources is one of the obstacles to the development of methods based on the time series of satellite images, the Google Earth engine processing platform has been used in this study. The proposed method is based on integrating supervised pixel-based classification results with segmentation results. First, training data of supervised classification is provided in a rigorous refining process without the need of collected data from field surveys or interpretation of high-resolution satellite images. Then, by calculating the separability of the two target classes in the time series of each index, the optimal indices are selected. Finally, by combining the results of segmentation and classification methods based on the votes obtained from the classification results, agricultural or non-agricultural class is assigned to each of the image segments. In addition to incorporating spatial information including edges and spatial proximity, this method has been able to improve the noise and porous results of pixel-based classification and has increased the overall accuracy of the final map from 90.7% to 96.05%. Also, user accuracy of both agricultural and non-agricultural classes show an improvement of 3.27 and 7.97%, respectively.