1 March 2007 Feature identification from commercial satellite images for military and homeland security operations in coastal zones
Steven D. Fleming, Thomas R. Jordan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Supporting U.S. military operations and homeland security requirements in and around coastal zones, geospatial intelligence must be quickly integrated by tactical commanders to meet mission demands. Increasingly, unclassified commercial imagery and data acquired from conventional aircraft, unmanned aerial vehicles and satellites are being used by military and civilian analysts to populate coastal zone databases. This study assessed the suitability of commercially available satellite images for littoral warfare and homeland security operations. From the study, data that show the probabilities for extracting mandatory shoreline features from various images for maps produced at varying scale is provided. A prioritized list of image resources was also created for use in assisting military and civilian analysts to rapidly collect feature data from commercially available resources.
Steven D. Fleming and Thomas R. Jordan "Feature identification from commercial satellite images for military and homeland security operations in coastal zones," Journal of Applied Remote Sensing 1(1), 013508 (1 March 2007). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.2722339
Published: 1 March 2007
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CITATIONS
Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Earth observing sensors

High resolution satellite images

Databases

Satellite imaging

Satellites

Image analysis

Image resolution

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