Repository logoCyprus University of Technology
Log In(current)
Ελληνικά
English
  1. Home
  2. Cyprus University of Technology (Research Output)
  3. Άρθρα/Articles
  4. The importance of accounting for atmospheric effects in the application of ndvi and interpretation of satellite imagery supporting archaeological research: the case studies of Palaepaphos and nea Paphos sites in Cyprus
  • Details

The importance of accounting for atmospheric effects in the application of ndvi and interpretation of satellite imagery supporting archaeological research: the case studies of Palaepaphos and nea Paphos sites in Cyprus

Journal
Remote Sensing
Date Issued
December 2011
Author(s)
Alexakis, Dimitrios  
Papoutsa, Christiana  
Papadavid, George  
Hadjimitsis, Diofantos G.  
Agapiou, Athos  
DOI
10.3390/rs3122605
Abstract
This paper presents the findings of the impact of atmospheric effects when applied on satellite images intended for supporting archaeological research. The study used eleven multispectral Landsat TM/ETM+ images from 2009 until 2010, acquired over archaeological and agricultural areas. The modified Darkest Pixel (DP) atmospheric correction algorithm was applied, as it is considered one of the most simple and effective atmospheric corrections algorithm. The NDVI equation was applied and its values were evaluated before and after the application of atmospheric correction to satellite images, to estimate its possible effects. The results highlighted that atmospheric correction has a significant impact on the NDVI values. This was especially true in seasons where the vegetation has grown. Although the absolute impact on NDVI, after applying the DP, was small (0.06), it was considered important if multi-temporal time series images need to be evaluated and cross-compared. The NDVI differences, before and after atmospheric correction, were assessed using student’s t-test and the statistical differences were found to be significant. It was shown that relative NDVI difference can be as much as 50%, if atmosphere effects are ignored. Finally, the results had proven that atmospheric corrections can enhance the interpretation of satellite images (especially in cases where optical thickness of water vapour is minimized ≈ 0). This fact can assist in the detection and identification of archaeological crop marks. Therefore, removal of atmospheric effects, for archaeological purposes, was found to be of great importance in improving the image enhancement and NDVI values.
Subjects

Atmospheric correctio...

Crop marks

Modified darkest pixe...

Vegetation indices

File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

remotesensing-03-02605.pdf

Size

1.91 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

f66e9b345ee7d9316c7d60c2000c78e3

Explore by
  • Collections
  • Research Outputs
  • Researchers
  • Faculty & Departments
  • Theses
  • Patents
  • Projects
  • Journals
  • Conferences
Useful Links
  • Researcher Portfolio Guide
  • Researcher Profile
  • Create an ORCID ID
  • CUT Open Access Author Fund
  • ETDS Guide
Copyright Policies

Use Sherpa/Romeo to find publisher copyright policies

Go
Go
  • SPARC Author Addendum Engine
  • National Open Access Policy in Cyprus
Deposit your work to Ktisis
  • Self-archiving. Please sign in to Ktisis.
  • Email your work to:
    library.dspace@cut.ac.cy
  • Contact your subject librarian

Member of

OpenAIREre3dataOpenDOARCOREDART
Cyprus University of Technology
Library and
Information
Services

Copyright © 2022 - Library and Information Services Feedback - Built with DSpace-CRIS - 4Science

  • Accessibility settings
  • Privacy policy
  • End User Agreement
COAR NotifyCOAR Notify