Advanced Systems Map, Monitor, and Manage Earth’s Resources
Environmental and Agricultural Resources
Originating Technology/NASA Contribution
A “revolution in remote sensing” took place in the mid-1980s,
when Dr. Alexander F.H. Goetz and his colleagues at the
Jet Propulsion Laboratory developed a powerful instrument
called AVIRIS (Airborne Visible InfraRed Imaging Spectrometer),
according to Dr. Nicholas Short, author of NASA’s online
Remote Sensing Tutorial. AVIRIS extended the capabilities
of ground-based spectrometers, enabling the spectrum-detecting
instruments to be used in the air on moving platforms.
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The
SpecTIR VNIR sensor system is a compact, commercial-off-the-shelf
system suitable for use on light and unmanned aircraft.
It has a spatial resolution from 0.5 to 5 meters,
with a spectral range of approximately 450 to 1,000
nanometers. |
In the early era of remote sensing, limitations in technology
prevented spectrometers from being used on moving platforms
mounted on aircraft and spacecraft. Essentially, the
high speeds of a moving vehicle did not allow spectrometers
sufficient time to accurately focus on sample features
of the Earth or atmospheric targets (water vapor, cloud
properties, aerosols, and absorbing gasses). All of this
changed with AVIRIS. The airborne spectrometer helped
to open the door for a remote sensing imaging method
known as hyperspectral imaging, according
to Short.
Hyperspectral imaging yields continuous spectral signatures
that are captured in high-spectral resolution; this surpasses
multispectral imaging methods that collect data at slower
rates and in low-spectral resolution. The continuous
spectral signatures, or spectral “curves,” measure reflectance
from the ground, water, or the atmosphere,
in the wavelength region responding to solar illumination.
The method is especially useful for classifying material
types on the Earth’s surface in fine detail, such as
rock-forming minerals, soil, vegetation, and water.
Two decades after its development, AVIRIS continues to
fly on aircraft today. The airborne instrument is identifying,
measuring, and monitoring constituents of the Earth’s
surface and atmosphere in order to facilitate advancements
in the fields of oceanography, limnology (the study of
lakes, ponds, and streams), snow hydrology, environmental
science, geology, volcanology,
soil and land management, atmospheric and aerosol studies,
and agriculture.
Meanwhile, even higher above the Earth, NASA also has
a hyperspectral instrument called Hyperion onboard the
Earth Observing-1 satellite. Launched in 2000, Hyperion
is providing a whole new class of Earth-observation data
for improved Earth surface characterization.
Beginning with AVIRIS and continuing with Hyperion, hyperspectral
imagery is helping to broaden NASA’s understanding of
the natural and man-made influences that contribute to
the ever-changing Earth.
Partnership
A service-disabled veteran-owned small business concern,
SpecTIR LLC is recognized for innovative sensor design,
on-demand hyperspectral data collection, and image-generating
products for business, academia, and national and international
governments. William Bernard, SpecTIR’s vice president
of business development, has brought a wealth of NASA-related
research experience to the company in the past few years.
Prior to joining SpecTIR, Bernard was the principal investigator
on a NASA-sponsored hyperspectral
crop-imaging project. This project, made possible through
a Small Business Technology Transfer (STTR) contract
with Goddard Space Flight Center, aimed to enhance airborne
hyperspectral sensing and ground-truthing means for crop
inspection in the Mid-Atlantic region of the United States.
With Goddard’s support and access to a wealth of the
Center’s hyperspectral resources, Bernard and his research
team established a program to collect crop imagery from
an aerial-mounted hyperspectral sensor and to correlate
this imagery with ground-truthed field data to further
define crop classifications and create spectral signature
data libraries.
Bernard sought to make the spectral libraries commercially
available as a means of assessing crop problems in near
real time. According to his initial proposal to Goddard,
early detection of crop problems directly affects the
cost of treatment as well as crop yields in a season.
Furthermore, the proposal stated that the data resulting
from this program could help alleviate both the environmental
and economic issues tied to the use of pesticides, herbicides,
and fertilizer in proximity to the Chesapeake Bay watershed,
which stretches across six Mid-Atlantic States, including
Maryland’s Eastern Shore, where Bernard’s research took
place.
Under the NASA-supported program, Bernard collected several
seasons’ worth of crop data from a DuPont agricultural
research farm in Delaware and from an oil spill in tidal
wetlands in Virginia. These efforts lasted several years
and resulted in progress toward commercial applications
for hyperspectral data.
Today, Bernard and this team of researchers have applied
the knowledge and techniques generated from their NASA-supported
hyperspectral research to commercial agricultural/environmental
products and applications with SpecTIR.
Product Outcome
Headquartered in Reno, Nevada, with additional offices
in Easton, Maryland; Manassas, Virginia; and Santa Barbara,
California, SpecTIR has carved out many niche markets
for its airborne hyperspectral data products. Areas of
application include precision farming and irrigation;
oil, gas, and mineral exploration; pollution and contamination
monitoring; wetland and forestry characterization; water
quality assessment; and submerged aquatic vegetation
mapping.
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Hyperspectral
data has many uses in agricultural applications,
including for precision farming, irrigation, assessing
crop health, disease monitoring, and determining
soil diversity. |
According to the company, many of its clients are environmental
management firms and agricultural groups that require
broad-location surveys and base mapping that cannot be
characterized by traditional mapping technologies. In
environmental monitoring, hyperspectral analysis can
uncover detrimental soil erosion, as well as natural
oil seeps and unnatural, man-made oil spills that are
polluting natural resources. In farming, the application
of water, pesticides, or fertilizer can be tailored to
the needs of crops, based on conditions exposed in hyperspectral
imagery.
SpecTIR’s “HyperSpecTIR” suite of hyperspectral instruments
incorporate visible and near infrared (VNIR) and short
wavelength infrared (SWIR) sensors to capture broad,
detailed imagery. The benefit of the dual-sensor approach
includes a greater insight into the spectral and spatial
content of a scene that is often not possible from single
sources of imagery, according to SpecTIR. In agriculture,
for instance, any two plants can appear similar to the
casual observer, but hyperspectral imagery can reveal
important spectral and spatial differences that other
image sources cannot, such as chemical composition. The
spatial accuracy of the imagery products conforms to
accepted international mapping standards and can be incorporated
into commonly used analysis packages.
The SpecTIR VNIR sensor system has a spatial resolution
from 0.5 to 5 meters, with a spectral range of approximately
450 to 1,000 nanometers. It is a commercial-off-the-shelf
system that can be combined with ground-truthing mechanisms
or other data sets to meet client-specified classifications.
The compact size of the VNIR system makes it suitable
for use on light and unmanned aircraft.
The SpecTIR SWIR sensor system has a spatial resolution
of 1.31 meters at 1,000 meters of altitude and a spectral
range of 970 to 2,450 nanometers.
The spectral resolution and number of spectral channels
is user-selectable during collections with a maximum
number of 254 spectral wavelength bands. (The high number
of bands allows for detection of minute variations in
spectral signatures.)
Today, SpecTIR has brought its NASA connection full circle,
as it continues to maintain a relationship with Goddard
through programs at the University of Maryland in College
Park, Maryland, and at the U.S. Department of Agriculture
campus in Beltsville, Maryland. Additionally, work continues
on the integration of hyperspectral data with laser imaging
detection and ranging systems and other commercial-off-the-shelf
technologies.
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