EROS-B in 3-D

February 26th, 2009

VICTORIA BUSHFIRES UPDATES WITH HIGH-RESOLUTION SATELLITE EROS-B

February 26th, 2009
Imagery over fires is being donated by Apogee and our associates to assist the firefighters in Victoria

 

Apogee tasked ImageSat International EROS-B high-resolution satellite to capture the affected area between the 14th and the 19th of February.

 

EROS satellites are high performance, light, highly manoeuvrable high-resolution observation satellites. The satellite’s light weight and rigidity allows a quick and stable re-pointing of it’s line of sight allowing fast manoeuvring between targets.

 

The images below have been acquired with EROS-B, the second of the EROS constellation. The camera system produces an image resolution of 70cm at nadir which allows accurate feature detection.

 

Overview of EROS-B acquisition over the burnt area.

 

Sub-metre resolution satellites make it possible to produce accurate assessments of the damage and assist the reconstruction effort.

 

South of the Bunyip State Park with EROS-B

 

The Town of Waterford Park spared by the blaze

 

A property destroyed by the fire which has spread along the highway

 

Fire scars after the powerful blaze jumped out of the forest.

TERRASAR-X OVER VICTORIA BUSHFIRES

February 19th, 2009
Imagery over fires is being donated by Apogee and our associates to assist the firefighters in Victoria
Apogee has tasked the new generation Radar satellite TerraSAR-X to acquire data over the severe bushfires in Victoria. This satellite can image an area twice a day through clouds and smoke at high resolution, where data acquired from the numerous optical satellites can not be captured until clouds part. The MODIS image shown below was acquired on the same day as the TerraSAR image showing the cloud cover at the time.

MODIS image from the 11th of February 2009.

Observation of the bushfires was made difficult due to extensive cloud cover as shown in the MODIS image above.

A ScanSAR image was acquired on the 11th of February 2009 and a composite image has been produced by merging a second ScanSAR image from the extensive archive TSX is capturing as a continuous background mission.

Comparing the post-fire acquisition to the archive data from the 20th of April 2008 improves the extraction of relevant information on fire impact.

A ScanSAR image has been acquired on the 11th of February 2009 and a composite image has been processed with archive data from the 20th of April 2008 to assess changes before and after the disaster. Changes can be seen in red. Slopes facing the radar sensor are brighter than the back slope of hills. This characteristic is enhanced due to lower leaf density in areas of forest where tree canopy has burnt.

The above picture is an extract of this image composition over the town of Marysville in which most of the infrastructures have been destroyed by the fire. The post-fire data registers a significant increase in backscatter magnitude compared to the archive data where houses have been destroyed due to the spread of debris and defoliation. This appears as distinct red areas within the township.

The town of Buxton in comparison, which has escaped the same level of destruction, is clearly distinguished by houses appearing white and indicating that their recorded radar reflection is unaltered from the previous year’s acquisition. This example shows how powerful the use of TerraSAR-X can be when no other visual assessment of the situation is possible due to heavy smoke and clouds.

The above image shows the Bunyip State park seen through clouds and smoke. The bright red area shows extensively burnt forest caused by the increased backscatter post-fire. This is due to the absence of leaves allowing the radar signal to interact with the bare ground and stems of the trees. On the slopes facing away from the radar signal this effect is not as evident.

Victoria Fires Satellite Imagery update

February 17th, 2009
Imagery over fires is being donated by Apogee and our associates to assist the firefighters in Victoria
Apogee tasked the Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. Disaster Monitoring Constellation (DMC), which captured the affected area on the morning of Friday, the 13th. The image below shows a False Colour Composite of the burnt area.

The Following subsets of the DMC imagery show the extent of the burnt area in the Bunyip State Park and the Kinglake National Park.

Bunyip State Park

Kinglake National Park

Victoria Bushfires

February 11th, 2009
Satellite views of Victoria’s Bushfires show the immense extent of Australia’s worst natural disaster. Images from the MODIS sensor and the Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. Disaster Monitoring Constellation are shown below.

MODIS image acquired on Saturday, 7th January 2009, at 250m spatial resolution shows large smoke plumes over Victoria.

The MODIS image acquired on Saturday the 8th has extensive cloud preventing a clear view of the extent of the smoke plume. The yellowish colour of the smoke however can be discriminated from the white cloud.

Apogee tasked the Surrey Satellite Technology Ltd. Disaster Monitoring Constellation (DMC), which captured the affected area at 30m resolution on the morning of Monday, the 10th, with its 650km wide imaging capability. Cloud cover obscures the lower half of the image but smoke extending in a North-Westerly direction can be seen for many of the still active fires.

Zoom over the Cathedral Range State Park area showing active fires.

Whyalla SA Mining Conference

December 12th, 2008

A big thank you to the organisers, delegates and exhibitors of the Mining South Australia conference who helped make Apogee’s experience at the conference more than enjoyable. While not the perfect building or layout design for a conference, the success can be measured by the response from the people who visited our booth, People were very enthusiastic about the applications for DEMs and Aerial Imagery to support their Mining Exploration project.

As key resources for Mining Explorations, Apogee exhibited a range of Digital Elevations Models. IFSAR DEMs at resolution of 5m xy posting with 50cm Z accuracy over part of South Australia, PRISM DEMs at resolution of 7.5m xy posting with 3m Z accuracy, and Aerial Imagery at resolution down to 5cm. We also demonstrated the pronounced difference between SRTM(Global DEM at 90m xy posting, 15m Z) data that is freely available.
Our 3D visualisation system NEXTIMAGE was also of interest as people could have a play and check how user-friendly and easy it is to visualise and interact with any geospatial data.

The large scale PRISM DEMs along side the dune removal technique were of particular interest to several Mining Exploration companies with interests in western and northern South Australia.

We look forward seeing the people we met again and meeting all the new people at Ausmine 2009.

XIMG_0291

Failure to plan for Major Australian Infrastructure projects

December 3rd, 2008

According to the Scope for Improvement 2008 report from Blake Dawson, an Australian legal service and strategic business provider, released November 2008, 52% of majors infrastructure projects in 2008 were not adequately planned. A significant increase from the 42% recorded just 2 years earlier, in 2006. Even more worrying, the lack of proper scoping resulted in more than a quarter of 1$bilion+ projects having cost over-runs of more than $200 million! And we are not surprised…

In the first stage of any infrastructure project planning, surveying the terrain is one of the most important steps in order to have an accurate spatial representation of the area. The larger the project, the more critical accurate spatial data is and a significant percentage of planning time, budget and personnel should be allocated to data collection.  The Report lists three of the “Main Factors” leading to poor scoping as “Lack of experienced personnel”, “Insufficient time” and “Insufficient site information”.

This is where the appropriate use of geospatial data from aerial or satellite sensors could provide the required information. Unfortunately it is at this very important step that the biggest mistake is usually made. Because of lack of time and experienced personnel, the planning of many multi-million or even billion dollar projects are based on inadequate geospatial data in terms of resolution or accuracy, resulting in increased costs and budget over-runs. The problem maybe due to a lack of understanding or appreciation of the importance of geospatial data in providing a solid project foundation. As an example, a project may require 1m contours and in view of inadequate planning for the associated data cost, a decision is made by management to derive the contours from freely available SRTM data. Technically this is not a problem, however deriving such apparent high accuracy from the 15-20 metre vertical accuracy of SRTM at a 90m posting is not sensible. While this sounds far-fetched, this example is based on an actual project and similar extrapolation of data without due care as to the warranted level of precision is a common occurrence.

Remote-sensing for Mining Industry

November 14th, 2008

Remote sensing has been extensively used geology, mining exploration, oil, gas and pipeline planning. Recent introduction of new sensors and techniques to improve accuracy and efficiency are allowing planners to perfom virtual field trips to gather accurate information before arriving on site. From the first assessment of a project to the logistical operation, and on going monitoring, remote-sensing is an indispensable tool for all stages of any major mining project. Time and cost as well as risks can be greatly reduced through the use of Remote sensing technologies.

A range of sensors and resolutions are available for the mining industry and an accurate assessment of the most suitable data for a specific task should to be conducted to get the greatest benefit. The following list gives an overview of which data and sensors are currently used:

· Optical imagery for vegetation classification, environmental impact assessments, site rehabilitation, and operation monitoring:

o  ALOS PRISM and Spot which offer relatively large coverage with a resolution around 2.5m and very soon the Rapideye constellation with its daily coverage and 5m multispectral resolution.

o    High resolution satellites such as IKONOS, QuickBird, EROS-A/B which offer a narrow swath but 1-m and sub-metre resolution

o     Digital airborne imagery up to 5cm resolution

o    Airborne Hyper-spectral sensors with some systems collecting up to 220 bands.

Mining monitoring

Fast monitoring over a mining site

· All weather Radar data for mine subsidence, stock pile, pipeline monitoring and gold exploration:

o  TerraSAR-X, Radarsat-2, Cosmo-Skymed, for a resolution range from 100m up to 1m

o    Airborne IFSAR with sub-meter resolution (ORI from Intermap)

· Digital elevation model for planning, modelling and quantitative structural mapping:

o Spaceborne Radar interferometry data for centimetre-scale changes measurements.

o   Stereo imagery from Airborne sensors

o Stereo imagery from Spaceborne sensors such as ALOS PRISM, Spot, IKONOS, QuickBird, EROS-A/B

o   IFSAR DEM form airborne IFSAR systems such as Intermap, Fugro.

o   LiDAR

 

Advanced processing methodology also allows for the manipulation of basic data sets revealing features that may be of interest in geological interpretation such as the surface benath sand dunes.

ALOS PRISM DEM

dune removal

Digital Elevation Model after dune removal process

All these data are usually integrated into modeling software, GIS systems and 3D-visualisation tools in addition to ground information and thus present invaluable decision level information.

A Current state-of-art in SAR Systems

November 4th, 2008

Current state-of-art in commercial and research based SAR Systems.

Air-Borne Systems

Commercial - Very few purely commercial players exist in this field

1.     Intermap IFSAR - Operational X-Band single pass Interferometric System with proven track record and very large archive of proven quality data (All of USA, Europe, Britain has been mapped as well as part of Asia and Australia). Long wavelength system for foliage penetration is currently available as repeat-pass system with multi-frequency single-pass interferometric system in development.

2.     Fugro-EarthData GeoSAR - Newly operational for X-Band and P-band single pass interferometry. Available data archive is limited and data validation is not wide-spread. Theoretically should produce good quality DEM’s using P-Band but this may conflict with the X-Band results, needing reconciliation. The system is ex-NASA. The accuracy in the system is achieved by redundancy/repeat flights. A good set of samples can be obtained at the NOAA site.

3.     Orbisat InSAR - A Brazilian system with InSAR capability in X-Band and  P-band. No validation available

Research - A number of research systems exist, operated by space agencies and educational institutions. The data from these systems has limited availability and is based on research campaigns. A suitable summary is on the POLSARPRO site.

1.     AIRSAR(NASA/JPL) - The elder statesman of air-borne systems, last known campaign was in 2004.

2.     EMISAR(DCRS) - Technical University of Denmark dual-band(L/C) fully polarimetric system.

3.     ESAR(DLR) - Quad-Band(X/C/L/P) fully polarimetric system with very high quality data used for Insar, Polsar and Polinsar research. This system served as a template for the TerraSAR-X sensor.

4.     Pi-SAR(NASDA-CRL) - JAXA Airborne L-Band system, the inspiration behind JERS and ALOS-PALSAR.

5.     RAMESES/SETHI(ONERA) - Someone in France must be obsessed with Egyptian history and pharaohs, or may be it is related to the sand penetration experiments with these systems.

6.     SAR-Convair(CCRS) - Polarimetic X/C-Band system used as a test-bed for Radardat 1 and 2 sensors by the Canadians. Mainly used for ship detection research, and ocean monitoring.

 

Space-Borne Systems - Recent years have seen the launch of numerous SAR sensors, both civilian and military.

The following SAR satellites are those that have readily accessible data, are currently operational or will be in the near future (which can mean anytime in the next 5 years given the nature of the space industry - you can really feel the relativistic time dilation, we must be near a black hole).  Among the military ones, we can mention SARLupe-1 and 2(Germany) , YaoGan(Chinese), and many more.

Currently In-Orbit Systems - These are either old die-hard systems, long past their scheduled expiry date or recently launched top-of-the-line sensors.

1.     RADARSAT-1 - The long lived Canadian SAR system operating in C-Band HH.

2.     ENVISAT-ASAR - SAR sensor on the multi-sensor Envisat bus. The data from this sensor is accessible for research from a rolling archive over the last 15days. The sensor can operate in alternate polarization mode.

3.     ALOS-PALSAR - The first fully polarimetric L-Band space borne sensor. The data from this sensor is heavily consumed by the Kyoto and Carbon project for global forest monitoring. It collects on a fixed schedule over all land-mass. The data is highly affordable and of good quality.

4.     TerraSAR-X - Newly launched poster child of the SAR world, first commercial SAR sensor to provide up to 1m resolution. Alternate polarization mode is operational, full-polarimetry and along track interferometry are some of the research modes available.

5.     RADARSAT-2 – After long delay, it is the first fully polarimetric C-band spaceborne system and provides data to 3m resolution.

6.     Cosmo-Skymed  - 3 out of 4 satellites are currently in orbit. With a very short revisit time, this new X-band polarimetric SAR constellation is a real advantage for monitoring applications.

 

Planned/To-be-launched-soon systems - These are the bad boys, getting to school late or the toddlers which show great promise. Not yet in orbit but will be nice to have data from them.

1.  Sentinel-1 - Follow on to the aging ENVISAT system mentioned above, with upgrades with new technology in C-band. Unlike its predecessor, it will be a smaller and dedicated SAR bus, other optical sensors will have to find their own rides on Sentinel 2 and 3. It is due for launch in 2011

2.     TerraSAR-L(Cartwheel) and Tandem-X - The novel concept in SAR systems is a constellation, this will allow single pass along-track and cross-track interferometry.

3.     MAPSAR - An L-band joint program between INPE(Brazil) and DLR, due some time the next decade.

4.     RADARSAT Constellation - Another program due next decade or after that is designed to provide daily global coverage using SAR.

There are probably more exotic sensors, both for research and military purposes and any comments on those sensors are more than welcome.

RapidEye releases first public images

October 22nd, 2008

RapidEye is a privately funded provider of satellite-derived information and services. With the release of the first public image, Earth observation is entering a new era. The  constellation of 5 identical satellites allows up to 4 million km2 to be imaged at high resolution in a daily basis.

Each satellite system can acquire data in five spectral band. It is the first commercial satellite to offer a Red-Edge band  to identify and measure unique change in the health of green vegetation.

The constellation opens up new opportunities in areas such as Agribusiness, Emergency management, Forestry, Oil & Gas, Environmental Monitoring, Defense and other markets where reliable and repetitive monitoring are required.

RapidEye Constellation
RapidEye Constellation