4.7 Article

Radiation Sensitivity Analysis of Ocean Wake Information Detection System Based on Visible Light Remote Sensing

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 14, Issue 16, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs14164054

Keywords

wake detection; radiation sensitivity; noise equivalent reflectance difference

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62075219]
  2. Key Technological Research Projects of Jilin Province, China [20190303094SF]

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This paper examines the detection of wakes in ocean visible light remote sensing, analyzing the weaknesses of the wake target signal and proposing improvements. The study calculates and simulates the radiative sensitivity of commonly used ocean remote sensing bands, providing theoretical guidance for the engineering design of a visible spectrum imaging system for wake detection.
Various ships and submerged moving objects in the ocean are key targets of numerous remote sensors. Wake has developed into one of the key detection targets of ocean visible light remote sensing as the visible trail information left by moving objects on the ocean surface. In the situation of slow ship speed, deep draft, and the existence of air clouds and fog, the wake target signal is weak, and the signal-to-noise ratio is low due to the low reflectivity of the sea surface and the interference of the background waves on the sea surface. This paper analyzes the radiative sensitivity of visible light imaging systems for the most crucial wake detection indicator in order to address the aforementioned issues. The noise equivalent reflectance difference, which is widely used to describe radiative sensitivity in engineering, is derived and numerically simulated by establishing the imaging link model based on TDICCD. We calculated the noise equivalent reflectivity difference for eight bands commonly used in ocean remote sensing; results show that the index is generally on the order of 10 4, and with the increase in the central wavelength, the value of noise equivalent reflectance difference also shows a downward trend and is stable within a certain value range. This research provides theoretical guidance for the engineering design of a visible spectrum imaging system for wake detection, aids in improving the imaging system's capacity to detect weak wake signals, and provides a basis for subsequent wake detection and enhancement processing, removal of false wakes, and retrieval of ship information.

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