Title
Impact Of Sensor Signal-To-Noise Ratio And Spectral Characteristics On Hyperspectral Geoscience Products
Abstract
Trade-off studies are essential in designing and developing any remote sensing instrument. In order to make effective decisions, the sensitivity analysis of task-specific information to be extracted from the remotely sensed data to the sensor's characteristic parameters must be conducted based on various simulated data. The impact of the changes of signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), spectral sampling interval (SSI), wavelength center position (WCP), and wavelength center error (WCE), on the identification and unmixing fraction maps of fifteen selected pure minerals is investigated in this paper. The results show that, for a sensor with a typical responsivity spectral dependence, a specification of SNR = 200 at 2100 nm is insufficient for identifying and mapping the selected minerals with linear spectral unmixing using the SWIR II region (1950 to 2450 nm). On the other hand, if the SNR is high enough, a SSI of 8.2 nm is sufficient for producing these geoscience products no matter where the WCPs of a sensor's bands are located. It was found that some minerals, such as Dickite, become unidentifiable when the SSI is increased to > 12.3 nm. A WCE has impacts on both the identification and unmixing fractions of some minerals, but these are small relative to the impacts of SNR.
Year
DOI
Venue
2006
10.1109/IGARSS.2006.534
2006 IEEE INTERNATIONAL GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING SYMPOSIUM, VOLS 1-8
Keywords
DocType
ISSN
hyperspectral, sensitivity analysis, linear spectral unmixing, mineral identification, signal-to-noise ratio, spectral sampling interval, wavelength center position, wavelength center error
Conference
2153-6996
Citations 
PageRank 
References 
2
0.46
1
Authors
4
Name
Order
Citations
PageRank
lixin sun161.77
Karl Staenz211523.05
Robert A. Neville3143.80
H. Peter White4328.27