This document outlines a process for determining surface reflectance from Landsat TM satellite imagery. It involves identifying dark target pixels between 0.01 and 0.25 reflectance at 470nm, removing the brightest 50% and darkest 20% of those pixels defined at 660nm, then using those pixels to determine surface reflectance and perform atmospheric reflectance correction to account for aerosol optical depth using a radiative transfer model.
This document outlines a process for determining surface reflectance from Landsat TM satellite imagery. It involves identifying dark target pixels between 0.01 and 0.25 reflectance at 470nm, removing the brightest 50% and darkest 20% of those pixels defined at 660nm, then using those pixels to determine surface reflectance and perform atmospheric reflectance correction to account for aerosol optical depth using a radiative transfer model.
This document outlines a process for determining surface reflectance from Landsat TM satellite imagery. It involves identifying dark target pixels between 0.01 and 0.25 reflectance at 470nm, removing the brightest 50% and darkest 20% of those pixels defined at 660nm, then using those pixels to determine surface reflectance and perform atmospheric reflectance correction to account for aerosol optical depth using a radiative transfer model.
This document outlines a process for determining surface reflectance from Landsat TM satellite imagery. It involves identifying dark target pixels between 0.01 and 0.25 reflectance at 470nm, removing the brightest 50% and darkest 20% of those pixels defined at 660nm, then using those pixels to determine surface reflectance and perform atmospheric reflectance correction to account for aerosol optical depth using a radiative transfer model.