Paper
16 October 1984 Interpretation Of Topographic Relief From Digital Multispectral Imagery
J B. Campbell, R M Haralick, S Wang
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 0475, Remote Sensing: Critical Review of Technology; (1984) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.966244
Event: 1984 Technical Symposium East, 1984, Arlington, United States
Abstract
Oblique illumination of irregular topography generates a pattern of highlighting and shadow as slopes facing the solar beam receive direct illumination, and as those on opposite sides of ridges are shadowed. On remotely sensed images these patterns appear as alternating dark and bright regions that reveal approximate positions of ridges and valleys. Knowledge of scene-specific variables (such as sun angle and elevation), general knowledge of geomorphology, atmospheric scattering, and spectral characteristics of landscapes permits reconstruction of the topography from its manifestation on the image. Raw image data record combined effects of topography, atmosphere, and varied spectral reflections of surface materials as a single image. Our interpretation procedure isolates brightnesses caused by direct and indirect illumination, varied material reflectances, and topographic modulation. From varied brightnesses caused by direct and indirect illumination, positions of ridges and valleys can be approximated. From variations in material reflectance, large rivers (channels with large areas of open water) can be detected. Finally, relative elevations can be estimated from analysis of drainage and ridge patterns using a strategy of "elevation growing" that assigns increasing elevation values to pixels as they are positioned at greater distances from rivers or other valley pixels already assigned elevations. Elevations along directions perpendicular to valleys increase as they climb towards the ridges interpreted from the shadow pattern. The result is an image that approximates the patterns of relief of the original topography.
© (1984) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
J B. Campbell, R M Haralick, and S Wang "Interpretation Of Topographic Relief From Digital Multispectral Imagery", Proc. SPIE 0475, Remote Sensing: Critical Review of Technology, (16 October 1984); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.966244
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KEYWORDS
Reflectivity

Modulation

Remote sensing

Sun

Image segmentation

Air contamination

Earth observing sensors

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