Friday, February 12, 2010

IMAGE FUSION

PROBLEM :

HOW DO WE GO ABOUT FUSING A MICROWAVE IMAGE AND OPTICAL IMAGE OF A SAME AREA ?

The conventional style of Georeferencing always exists. But what if we are not microwave specialists and could not identify features just by seeing?
If we go for a path and row we can find only a scene and not a specific point which we would require to georeference an image and thus fuse them. Further its a critical situation if we use a fusing of an Interfereogram.

2 comments:

  1. hey is till can't get u? This 'image fusion' is a little vague.

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  2. Microwave images can be geocoded with their orbital information. This information should either be with you when you downloaded the file or if you lost it, you can get them back from the archives available over the internet (URL you need to figure out). After geocoding, the images can still be in SLC (single look complex). You can later multilook them until your feature of interest appears. After this you can go ahead with your desired fusion algorithm.

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