4.7 Article

DSRC: An Improved Topographic Correction Method for Optical Remote-Sensing Observations Based on Surface Downwelling Shortwave Radiation

Journal

Publisher

IEEE-INST ELECTRICAL ELECTRONICS ENGINEERS INC
DOI: 10.1109/TGRS.2021.3083754

Keywords

Surface topography; Remote sensing; Land surface; Earth; Artificial satellites; Satellites; Integrated circuits; Downwelling shortwave radiation (DSR); Landsat 8 operational land imager (OLI); mountainous areas; topographic correction; topographic effects

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [42071349, 41971282]
  2. Sichuan Science and Technology Program [2020JDJQ0003]
  3. Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS) Light of West China Program

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The study proposes a Downwelling Shortwave Radiation (DSR) based correction method that effectively considers topographic effects and corrects NDVI values for poorly illuminated surfaces. The DSRC method demonstrates advantages in retaining spectral patterns and normalizing surface reflectance, compared to other existing methods.
The complex terrain in mountainous areas distorts solar illumination, which brings a strong topographic effect on optical remote-sensing observations. Although many efforts have been done to correct this effect via normalizing solar illumination induced differences, there are still high uncertainty, especially for poor illuminated surfaces. In this study, a downwelling shortwave radiation (DSR)-based correction (DSRC) method was proposed. The topographic effects were accounted by normalizing DSR differences at different topographic conditions, and a stratified correction strategy was applied by separating the image into different groups according to normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) to consider the spectral differences of different land-cover types. The DSRC method was applied to nine Landsat 8 scenes with high-resolution DSR data acquired by downscaling the Meteosat Second Generation (MSG) DSR product. The performance analysis indicates that the correlation coefficient between the corrected surface reflectance and illumination conditions notably decreased. Compared with SCS+ C, empirical rotation, Statistical-Empirical, and Modified Minnaert methods, the DSRC method well retains inherent spectral pattern and provides good advantages in normalizing the aspect differences of surface reflectance. Furthermore, the comparison of NDVI values before and after correction indicated that DSRC preserved the original values and successfully corrected the overestimated NDVI values of poor illuminated surfaces. The corrected NDVI time series provide more reasonable cycle of the phenology of vegetated surfaces than the original series. In summary, the DSRC method has a strong potential for reducing topographic effects that currently limit the applications of remotely sensed data in mountainous areas.

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