Course Instructor
Course Instructor
Course Instructor
1. Energy Source or
Illumination (A)
2. Radiation and the
Atmosphere (B)
3. Interaction with the
Object (C)
4. Recording of Energy
by the Sensor (D)
5. Transmission,
Reception and
Processing (E)
6. Interpretation and
Analysis (F)
7. Application (G)
Energy Sources and Electromagnetic Radiation
E = h = h c /
where E = energy of a photon [J]
h = Plank's constant [6.6262 10-34 J s]
= frequency [Hz]
2. Thermal Infrared
Remote Sensing
3. Microwave Remote
Sensing
How is EMR used in Remote Sensing
Three main ‘models’ of how EMR is used in Remote Sensing
Component Percentage
N2 78.08
The atmosphere also contains
O2 20.94 particles with a range of sizes
Ar 0.93 and sources which are of great
CO2 0.0314 importance in remote sensing.
O3 0.00000004
Interactions of EM Radiation with the Atmosphere
Rayleigh scattering
Non-selective scattering
Rayleigh scattering
Reflection
Two types of reflection, which represent the two extreme
ends of the way in which energy is reflected from a target are:
1. Specular reflection
2. Diffuse reflection.
Interactions of EM Radiation with the Earth’s Surface
Vegetation: A chemical
compound in leaves called
chlorophyll strongly absorbs
radiation in the red and blue
wavelengths but reflects green
wavelengths.