Paper
24 April 2010 Correlation of environmental data measurements with polarimetric LWIR sensor measurements of manmade objects in natural clutter
James McCarthy, Mark Woolley, Luz Roth
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
In recent years there has been an increased interest in using polarimetric imaging sensors for terrestrial remote sensing applications because of their ability to discriminate manmade objects in a natural clutter background. However, adverse weather limits the performance of these sensors. Long Wave Infrared (LWIR) polarimetric sensor data of a scene containing manmade objects in a natural clutter background is compared with simultaneously collected environmental data. In this paper, a metric is constructed from the Stokes parameter S1 and is correlated with some environmental channels. There are differences in the correlation outputs, with the sensor data metric positively correlated with some environmental channels, negatively correlated with some channels and uncorrelated with other channels. Results from real data measurements are presented and interpreted. An uncooled LWIR sensor using an achromatic retarder to capture the polarimetric states performed the data collection. The environmental channels include various meteorological channels, radiation loading and soil properties.
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James McCarthy, Mark Woolley, and Luz Roth "Correlation of environmental data measurements with polarimetric LWIR sensor measurements of manmade objects in natural clutter", Proc. SPIE 7672, Polarization: Measurement, Analysis, and Remote Sensing IX, 76720M (24 April 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.850353
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KEYWORDS
Polarimetry

Sensors

Environmental sensing

Long wavelength infrared

Vegetation

Humidity

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