2000
DOI: 10.1080/02757250009532416
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An airborne multi‐angle TIR/VNIR imaging system

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Cited by 9 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…Jones and Casa (2000) explain how information on plant canopies can be retrieved from their Variable Interference Filter Imaging Spectrometer, while Debryun and Veroustraete (2000) use BRDF models in the exploitation of spectroscopy data generated with the DAIS instrument. For its part, Wang (2000) outlines work in preparation in China to develop relevant airborne sensor technology. Two papers then deal with future space missions: Barnsley et al (2000) outline an instrument under construction, slated for launch on an experimental platform around 2002, while Vogt et al (2000) reflect on the advantages and implications of acquiring multidirectional and multispectral data with the proposed PRISM sensor on the LSPIM mission, a candidate Earth Explorer core mission of the European Space Agency.…”
Section: Conference Proceedingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Jones and Casa (2000) explain how information on plant canopies can be retrieved from their Variable Interference Filter Imaging Spectrometer, while Debryun and Veroustraete (2000) use BRDF models in the exploitation of spectroscopy data generated with the DAIS instrument. For its part, Wang (2000) outlines work in preparation in China to develop relevant airborne sensor technology. Two papers then deal with future space missions: Barnsley et al (2000) outline an instrument under construction, slated for launch on an experimental platform around 2002, while Vogt et al (2000) reflect on the advantages and implications of acquiring multidirectional and multispectral data with the proposed PRISM sensor on the LSPIM mission, a candidate Earth Explorer core mission of the European Space Agency.…”
Section: Conference Proceedingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Compared with satellite data, airborne images are closer to the ground measurement scale and could have more view angles. Airborne multiangular TIR data can be acquired either with a wideangle thermal camera or a thermal sensor with a rotation device (Liu et al, 2000;Wang, 2000). Because of the complexity in airborne data processing as well as component temperature retrieval itself, reports about validated results of component temperatures from airborne images are scarcely found in literatures.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…AMTIS is an airborne multi-angular sensor capable to acquire 9 images of different observation angles during one track [3]. In the data acquired in April 2001 near Beijing, the nadir view ground resolution is about 1.36m.…”
Section: Analysis With Order Entropy Measurementmentioning
confidence: 99%