
Atmospheric correction of multispectral satellite imagery
Author(s) -
L.V. Katkovsky
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
ukraïnsʹkij žurnal distancìjnogo zonduvannâ zemlì
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2313-2132
DOI - 10.36023/ujrs.2020.25.170
Subject(s) - radiance , remote sensing , atmospheric correction , multispectral image , satellite , atmosphere (unit) , pixel , hyperspectral imaging , environmental science , atmospheric model , spectral bands , computer science , meteorology , geology , geography , physics , computer vision , astronomy
Atmospheric correction is a necessary step in the processing of remote sensing data acquired in the visible and NIR spectral bands.The paper describes the developed atmospheric correction technique for multispectral satellite data with a small number of relatively broad spectral bands (not hyperspectral). The technique is based on the proposed analytical formulae that expressed the spectrum of outgoing radiation at the top of a cloudless atmosphere with rather high accuracy. The technique uses a model of the atmosphere and its optical and physical parameters that are significant from the point of view of radiation transfer, the atmosphere is considered homogeneous within a satellite image. To solve the system of equations containing the measured radiance of the outgoing radiation in the bands of the satellite sensor, the number of which is less than the number of unknowns of the model, it is proposed to use various additional relations, including regression relations between the optical parameters of the atmosphere. For a particular image pixel selected in a special way, unknown atmospheric parameters are found, which are then used to calculate the reflectance for all other pixels.Testing the proposed technique on OLI sensor data of Landsat 8 satellite showed higher accuracy in comparison with the FLAASH and QUAC methods implemented in the well-known ENVI image processing software. The technique is fast and there is using no additional information about the atmosphere or land surface except images under correction.