Digital Airborne Camera [electronic resource] :Introduction and Technology / edited by Rainer Sandau.
by Sandau, Rainer [editor.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
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Long Loan | MAIN LIBRARY | GA102.4.R44 (Browse shelf) | Available |
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G1030.B22 2014 Mapping the cultures of the West / | GA 102 .O32 Exploratory visualization of temporal geospatial data using animation | GA102.4.R44 Remote Sensing of Urban and Suburban Areas | GA102.4.R44 Digital Airborne Camera | GA102.4.R44 Watching Earth from Space | GA102.4.R44 Remote Sensing | GA102.4.R44 Monitoring Atmospheric Water Vapour |
Foundations and Definitions -- The Imaged Object and the Atmosphere -- Structure of a Digital Airborne Camera -- Calibration -- Data Processing and Archiving -- Examples of Large-Scale Digital Airborne Cameras.
Digital airborne cameras are now penetrating the fields of photogrammetry and remote sensing. Due to the last decade’s results in research and development in the fields of for instance detector technology, computing power, memory capacity position and orientation measurement it is now possible with this new generation of airborne cameras to generate different sets of geometric and spectral data with high geometric and radiometric resolutions within a single flight. This is a decisive advantage as compared to film based airborne cameras. The linear characteristic of the opto-electronic converters is the basis for the transition from an imaging camera to an images generating measuring instrument. Because of the direct digital processing chain from the airborne camera to the data products there is no need for the processes of chemical film development and digitising the film information. Failure sources as well as investments and staff costs are avoided. But the effective use of this new technology requires the knowledge of the features of the image and information generation, its possibilities and its restrictions. This book describes all components of a digital airborne camera from the object to be imaged to the mass memory device. So the image quality influencing processes in the nature are described, as for instance the reflection of the electromagnetic sun spectrum at the objects to be imaged and the influence of the atmosphere. Also, the essential features of the new digital sensor system, their characteristics and parameters, are addressed and put into the system context. The complexity of the cooperation of all camera components, as for instance optics, filters, detector elements, analogue and digital electronics, software and so forth, becomes transparent. The book includes also the description of an example system. Audience: This book will be of interest to managers, operators, data users dealing with the new digital airborne cameras; students in the fields of photogrammetry and remote sensing.
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