Spatial Resolution, Pixel Size, and Scale
For some remote sensing instruments, the distance between the target being
imaged and the platform, plays a large role in determining the detail of
information obtained and the total area imaged by the sensor. Sensors onboard
platforms far away from their targets, typically view a larger area, but cannot
provide great detail. Compare what an astronaut onboard the space shuttle sees
of the Earth to what you can see from an airplane. The astronaut might
see your
whole province or country in one glance, but couldn't distinguish individual
houses. Flying over a city or town, you would be able to see individual
buildings and cars, but you would be viewing a much smaller area than the
astronaut. There is a similar difference between satellite images and airphotos.
The detail discernible in an image is dependent on the spatial resolution of the sensor
and refers to the size of the smallest possible feature that can be detected.
Spatial resolution of passive sensors (we will look at the special case of
active microwave sensors later) depends primarily on their Instantaneous Field of View (IFOV). The
IFOV is the angular cone of visibility of the sensor (A) and determines the
area on the Earth's surface which is "seen" from a given altitude at
one particular moment in time (B). The size of the area viewed is determined by
multiplying the IFOV by the distance from the ground to the sensor (C). This
area on the ground is called the resolution
cell and determines a sensor's maximum spatial resolution. For a
homogeneous feature to be detected, its size generally has to be equal to or
larger than the resolution cell. If the feature is smaller than this, it may
not be detectable as the average brightness of all features in that resolution
cell will be recorded. However, smaller features may sometimes be detectable if
their reflectance dominates within a articular resolution cell allowing
sub-pixel or resolution cell detection.
most remote sensing images are composed of a matrix
of picture elements, or pixels, which are the smallest
units of an image. Image pixels are normally square and represent a certain
area on an image. It is important to distinguish between pixel size and spatial
resolution - they are not interchangeable. If a sensor has a spatial resolution
of 20 metres and an image from that sensor is displayed at full resolution,
each pixel represents an area of 20m x 20m on the ground. In this case the
pixel size and resolution are the same. However, it is possible to display an
image with a pixel size different than the resolution. many posters of satellite images
Images where only large features are visible are said to have coarse or low resolution. In fine or high resolution images, small
objects can be detected. Military sensors for example, are designed to view as
much detail as possible, and therefore have very fine resolution. Commercial
satellites provide imagery with resolutions varying from a few metres to
several kilometres. Generally speaking, the finer the resolution, the less
total ground area can be seen.
The ratio of distance on an image or map, to actual ground distance is
referred to as scale. If you had a map with a scale of 1:100,000, an object of
1cm length on the map would actually be an object 100,000cm (1km) long on the
ground. Maps or images with small "map-to-ground ratios" are referred
to as small scale (e.g. 1:100,000), and those with larger ratios (e.g. 1:5,000)
are called large scale.
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