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Determination of topography using photoclinometry

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

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Determination of topography using photoclinometry. / Wilson, L.; Lawson, R.; Efford, N. D. et al.
1988. 429 Paper presented at IGARSS'88 - Remote Sensing: Moving towards the 21th Centure, Edinburgh, UK.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Wilson, L, Lawson, R, Efford, ND & Young, PC 1988, 'Determination of topography using photoclinometry', Paper presented at IGARSS'88 - Remote Sensing: Moving towards the 21th Centure, Edinburgh, UK, 12/09/88 - 16/09/88 pp. 429.

APA

Wilson, L., Lawson, R., Efford, N. D., & Young, P. C. (1988). Determination of topography using photoclinometry. 429. Paper presented at IGARSS'88 - Remote Sensing: Moving towards the 21th Centure, Edinburgh, UK.

Vancouver

Wilson L, Lawson R, Efford ND, Young PC. Determination of topography using photoclinometry. 1988. Paper presented at IGARSS'88 - Remote Sensing: Moving towards the 21th Centure, Edinburgh, UK.

Author

Wilson, L. ; Lawson, R. ; Efford, N. D. et al. / Determination of topography using photoclinometry. Paper presented at IGARSS'88 - Remote Sensing: Moving towards the 21th Centure, Edinburgh, UK.1 p.

Bibtex

@conference{a63094728b9e461da14614d65e103e64,
title = "Determination of topography using photoclinometry",
abstract = "Photoclinometry, the use of brightness variations to indicate the tilt from the horizontal of the surface elements represented by the pixels of an image, is discussed. Three photoclinometry techniques are being studied: (a) the discrimination of significantly different modes in brightness histograms, which lead to spatially correlated regions when mapped back into image space; (b) the use of multispectral information about a scene to classify the pixels into a (small) number of spatially related units which are assumed in general to have different albedos; and (c) the use of self-adaptive, two-dimensional time-series-analysis methods to locate boundaries between regions of differing albedo. Currently, method (a) is regarded as least reliable, whereas method (c) is potentially applicable to a wide range of image classification problems. Tests of the ability of the photoclinometric method to reproduce known topography show that at a spatial resolution (pixel size) of order 100 m, it is capable of estimating absolute topographic heights to within 10% over horizontal distances of order 100 km.",
author = "L. Wilson and R. Lawson and Efford, {N. D.} and Young, {P. C.}",
year = "1988",
month = sep,
language = "English",
pages = "429",
note = "IGARSS'88 - Remote Sensing: Moving towards the 21th Centure ; Conference date: 12-09-1988 Through 16-09-1988",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Determination of topography using photoclinometry

AU - Wilson, L.

AU - Lawson, R.

AU - Efford, N. D.

AU - Young, P. C.

PY - 1988/9

Y1 - 1988/9

N2 - Photoclinometry, the use of brightness variations to indicate the tilt from the horizontal of the surface elements represented by the pixels of an image, is discussed. Three photoclinometry techniques are being studied: (a) the discrimination of significantly different modes in brightness histograms, which lead to spatially correlated regions when mapped back into image space; (b) the use of multispectral information about a scene to classify the pixels into a (small) number of spatially related units which are assumed in general to have different albedos; and (c) the use of self-adaptive, two-dimensional time-series-analysis methods to locate boundaries between regions of differing albedo. Currently, method (a) is regarded as least reliable, whereas method (c) is potentially applicable to a wide range of image classification problems. Tests of the ability of the photoclinometric method to reproduce known topography show that at a spatial resolution (pixel size) of order 100 m, it is capable of estimating absolute topographic heights to within 10% over horizontal distances of order 100 km.

AB - Photoclinometry, the use of brightness variations to indicate the tilt from the horizontal of the surface elements represented by the pixels of an image, is discussed. Three photoclinometry techniques are being studied: (a) the discrimination of significantly different modes in brightness histograms, which lead to spatially correlated regions when mapped back into image space; (b) the use of multispectral information about a scene to classify the pixels into a (small) number of spatially related units which are assumed in general to have different albedos; and (c) the use of self-adaptive, two-dimensional time-series-analysis methods to locate boundaries between regions of differing albedo. Currently, method (a) is regarded as least reliable, whereas method (c) is potentially applicable to a wide range of image classification problems. Tests of the ability of the photoclinometric method to reproduce known topography show that at a spatial resolution (pixel size) of order 100 m, it is capable of estimating absolute topographic heights to within 10% over horizontal distances of order 100 km.

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=0024079102&partnerID=8YFLogxK

M3 - Conference paper

AN - SCOPUS:0024079102

SP - 429

T2 - IGARSS'88 - Remote Sensing: Moving towards the 21th Centure

Y2 - 12 September 1988 through 16 September 1988

ER -