The International Archives of the Photogrammetry, Remote Sensing and Spatial Information Sciences
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Articles | Volume XLII-5
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-5-597-2018
https://doi.org/10.5194/isprs-archives-XLII-5-597-2018
19 Nov 2018
 | 19 Nov 2018

PAN SHARPENING USING RELATIVE SPECTRAL RESPONSE OF SENSOR FOR CARTOSAT-1 PAN AND RESOURCESAT LISS-4 MX DATA

R. V. G. Anjaneyulu, A. Krishna Prasad, K. Srinivasa Murthy, C. V. Rao, and B. Gopala Krishna

Keywords: PAN sharpening, Relative Spectral response (RSR), Curvelet transform, Spectral distortion, Spectral fidelity

Abstract. Most of the Indian remote sensing systems, provide sensors with one high spatial resolution panchromatic (PAN) and several multispectral (MS) bands. An increasing number of applications, such as feature detection, change monitoring, and land cover classification, often demand the use of images with both high spatial and high spectral resolution. Image fusion or pan sharpening, is a technique to enhance the spatial resolution. The most significant problem in the traditional fusion methods is spectral distortion of fused images. The main reason for this being, the physical spectral characteristic of the sensors are not considered during the fusion process, resulting in undesirable effects such as modified spectral signatures resulting in classification errors and resolution over injection.

For most earth resource satellites which provide both PAN and MS bands, in ideal condition, all MS bands would be well separated and would cover exactly the same wavelengths as the PAN band. Theoretically, the measured energy in the PAN band can be obtained with the summation of corresponding MS bands. As the measured energy in an individual channel is the sum of incoming radiation and relative spectral response: Lk = L(λ) Rk(λ); where λ is the wavelength, the in-band radiance, L(λ) at aperture spectral radiance and Rk(λ) the peak-normalized spectral response. Therefore, the energy in PAN band can be estimated by defining weights as follows: Pan = wR R + wG G + wNIR NIR + other; where Pan, G, R, NIR represent the radiance of individual spectral bands wG, wR, wNIR are the weights of corresponding MS bands and other for the influence of the spectral range which is missing from MS bands but still covered with the PAN band.

In this paper, a novel spectral preservation fusion method for remotely sensed images using Cartosat-1 PAN and Resourcesat-Liss4 Mx data is presented by considering the physical characteristics of the sensors. It is based on the curvelet transform using relative spectral response (RSR) values of the sensor, improved in two parts: 1) the construction of PAN image using RSR values and the curvelet components, 2) the injection method of detail information. The performance and efficiency of the proposed method is compared with traditional IHS, wavelet based methods both visually and quantitatively. The results show that the proposed method preserves spatial details and minimize spectral distortion.