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SENSOR: a tool for the simulation of hyperspectral remote sensing systems

Börner, Anko ; Wiest, Lorenz ; Keller, Peter ; Reulke, Ralf ; Richter, Rolf ; Schaepman, Michael ; Schläpfer, Daniel

ISPRS journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, 2001-03, Vol.55 (5), p.299-312 [Periódico revisado por pares]

Amsterdam: Elsevier B.V

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  • Título:
    SENSOR: a tool for the simulation of hyperspectral remote sensing systems
  • Autor: Börner, Anko ; Wiest, Lorenz ; Keller, Peter ; Reulke, Ralf ; Richter, Rolf ; Schaepman, Michael ; Schläpfer, Daniel
  • Assuntos: APEX ; Applied geophysics ; Earth sciences ; Earth, ocean, space ; Exact sciences and technology ; Hyperspectral ; Internal geophysics ; Optimisation ; Sensor ; Simulation
  • É parte de: ISPRS journal of photogrammetry and remote sensing, 2001-03, Vol.55 (5), p.299-312
  • Descrição: The consistent end-to-end simulation of airborne and spaceborne earth remote sensing systems is an important task, and sometimes the only way for the adaptation and optimisation of a sensor and its observation conditions, the choice and test of algorithms for data processing, error estimation and the evaluation of the capabilities of the whole sensor system. The presented software simulator SENSOR (Software Environment for the Simulation of Optical Remote sensing systems) includes a full model of the sensor hardware, the observed scene, and the atmosphere in between. The simulator consists of three parts. The first part describes the geometrical relations between scene, sun, and the remote sensing system using a ray-tracing algorithm. The second part of the simulation environment considers the radiometry. It calculates the at-sensor radiance using a pre-calculated multidimensional lookup-table taking the atmospheric influence on the radiation into account. The third part consists of an optical and an electronic sensor model for the generation of digital images. Using SENSOR for an optimisation requires the additional application of task-specific data processing algorithms. The principle of the end-to-end-simulation approach is explained, all relevant concepts of SENSOR are discussed, and first examples of its use are given. The verification of SENSOR is demonstrated. This work is closely related to the Airborne PRISM Experiment (APEX), an airborne imaging spectrometer funded by the European Space Agency.
  • Editor: Amsterdam: Elsevier B.V
  • Idioma: Inglês

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