The main objective of this article is quality assessment of pansharpening fusion methods. Pansharpening is a fusion technique to combine a panchromatic image of high spatial resolution with multispectral image data of lower spatial resolution to obtain a high-resolution multispectral image. During this process, the significant spectral characteristics of the multispectral data should be preserved. For images acquired at the same time by the same sensor, most algorithms for pansharpening provide very good results, i.e. they retain the high spatial resolution of the panchromatic image and the spectral information from the multispectral image (single-sensor, single-date fusion). For multi-date, multi-sensor fusion, however, these techniques can still create spatially enhanced data sets, but usually at the expense of the spectral consistency. In this study, eight different methods are compared for image fusion to show their ability to fuse multitemporal and multi-sensor image data. A series of eight multitemporal multispectral remote sensing images is fused with a panchromatic Ikonos image and a TerraSAR-X radar image as a panchromatic substitute. The fused images are visually and quantitatively analysed for spectral characteristics preservation and spatial improvement. It can not only be proven that the Ehlers fusion is superior to all other tested algorithms, it is also the only method that guarantees excellent colour preservation for all dates and sensors used in this study.
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