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Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations

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dc.contributor.author Main, Russell S
dc.contributor.author Cho, Moses A
dc.contributor.author Van Aardt, J
dc.contributor.author Majeke, B
dc.date.accessioned 2009-02-19T09:27:00Z
dc.date.available 2009-02-19T09:27:00Z
dc.date.issued 2008-10
dc.identifier.citation Main, R., Cho, M.A., Van Aardt, J. and Majeke, B. 2008. Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations. 14 Australasian Remote Sensing and Photogrammetry Conference, Darwin, Australia, 29 September, pp 11 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3037
dc.description 14 Australasian Remote Sensing and Photogrammetry Conference, Darwin, Australia, 29 September 2008 en
dc.description.abstract The majority of earth observation studies have for years made use of data from multispectral spaceborne sensors. More recently though, both airborne and spaceborne narrowband hyperspectral sensors have come to the fore and are able to provide more detailed spectral information. Narrowband sensors, with their many contiguous bands, have proved useful in discriminating between vegetation states, e.g. water stress and nutrient deficiencies. However, hyperspectral remote sensing has a number of disadvantages related to the cost of data collection (especially airborne data), the low signal-to-noise ratios of spaceborne hyperspectral data, and data redundancy given the large number of contiguous bands. These challenges, exacerbated by known broadband sensor limitations, have prompted research into the reduction of hyperspectral data dimensionality towards the identification of application-specific spectral features, which ultimately could lead to the definition of new application-centric multispectral sensors. SUNSPACE, in collaboration with the University of Stellenbosch and the South African Department of Science and Technology, aim to launch a high resolution multispectral micro satellite (SumbandilaSat) in 2009. The satellite will be equipped with a multispectral sensor, with a 6.25m spatial resolution and 6 spectral bands. Two of these spectral bands have been strategically placed given a priori correlations between the vegetation signal in these regions and vegetation state, that is the red edge band (690-730nm) and xanthophyll band (520-540nm). The objective of this study was to investigate whether fewer and strategically placed multispectral wavebands could provide similar, and/or more cost effective information compared to common hyperspectral sensors. Canopy-level ASD data were collected and resampled to various sensor resolutions, that is Hyperion, HyMap, AVIRIS and SumbandilaSat en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Remote sensing en
dc.subject Hyperspectral en
dc.subject Multispectral en
dc.subject Site quality en
dc.subject SumbandilaSat satellite en
dc.subject Eucalyptus grandis en
dc.subject Richmond en
dc.subject Kwazulu Natal en
dc.subject South Africa en
dc.title Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations en
dc.type Conference Presentation en
dc.identifier.apacitation Main, R. S., Cho, M. A., Van Aardt, J., & Majeke, B. (2008). Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3037 en_ZA
dc.identifier.chicagocitation Main, Russel S, Moses A Cho, J Van Aardt, and B Majeke. "Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations." (2008): http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3037 en_ZA
dc.identifier.vancouvercitation Main RS, Cho MA, Van Aardt J, Majeke B, Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations; 2008. http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3037 . en_ZA
dc.identifier.ris TY - Conference Presentation AU - Main, Russel S AU - Cho, Moses A AU - Van Aardt, J AU - Majeke, B AB - The majority of earth observation studies have for years made use of data from multispectral spaceborne sensors. More recently though, both airborne and spaceborne narrowband hyperspectral sensors have come to the fore and are able to provide more detailed spectral information. Narrowband sensors, with their many contiguous bands, have proved useful in discriminating between vegetation states, e.g. water stress and nutrient deficiencies. However, hyperspectral remote sensing has a number of disadvantages related to the cost of data collection (especially airborne data), the low signal-to-noise ratios of spaceborne hyperspectral data, and data redundancy given the large number of contiguous bands. These challenges, exacerbated by known broadband sensor limitations, have prompted research into the reduction of hyperspectral data dimensionality towards the identification of application-specific spectral features, which ultimately could lead to the definition of new application-centric multispectral sensors. SUNSPACE, in collaboration with the University of Stellenbosch and the South African Department of Science and Technology, aim to launch a high resolution multispectral micro satellite (SumbandilaSat) in 2009. The satellite will be equipped with a multispectral sensor, with a 6.25m spatial resolution and 6 spectral bands. Two of these spectral bands have been strategically placed given a priori correlations between the vegetation signal in these regions and vegetation state, that is the red edge band (690-730nm) and xanthophyll band (520-540nm). The objective of this study was to investigate whether fewer and strategically placed multispectral wavebands could provide similar, and/or more cost effective information compared to common hyperspectral sensors. Canopy-level ASD data were collected and resampled to various sensor resolutions, that is Hyperion, HyMap, AVIRIS and SumbandilaSat DA - 2008-10 DB - ResearchSpace DP - CSIR KW - Remote sensing KW - Hyperspectral KW - Multispectral KW - Site quality KW - SumbandilaSat satellite KW - Eucalyptus grandis KW - Richmond KW - Kwazulu Natal KW - South Africa LK - https://researchspace.csir.co.za PY - 2008 T1 - Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations TI - Comparison between sensors with different spectral resolutions, relative to the sumbandila satellite, for assessing site quality differences, in eucalyptus grandis plantations UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10204/3037 ER - en_ZA


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