Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

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Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences
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Transcript of Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Page 1: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and

contributions of remote sensing to the

Social Sciences

Page 2: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Urban-Suburban Land Use

• Urban and suburban expansion– almost 1/2 the Earth’s population lives in cities

– rapid expansion of urban centers and their peripheries

– impacts on land cover, societal structure of the cities, population distribution, land use characteristics

– interconnectivity of cites at large scales

Page 3: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Urban remote sensing

• High spatial resolution data are needed• Temporal and spectral resolution are typically not a significant requirement for most applications

• Ancillary data typically used (census data)

• Can measure variables such as urban extent, housing density, structure type, urban vegetation cover, air quality, change detection

Page 4: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Temporal and spatial resolution requirements vary depending on applications:

•short term (event-scale, sub-annual) vs. long term (interannual)

•high spatial resolution (< 1m) vs. medium spatial resolution (15-30m)

(see Jensen Fig. 12-1)

Page 5: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

High Spatial Resolution Sensors:

• QuickBird (65cm B/W, 4m multispectral)

• IKONOS (1m B/W, 4m multispectral)

• SPOT (2.5m - 20m multispectral)• ASTER (15 -30m multispectral)• Landsat ETM+ (15m B/W, 4m multispectral)

Page 6: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Delineation of Urban Areas

• Difficult to do because urban areas are diverse and complex

• Boundaries between urban and suburban are not always clear

• Lack of a consistent definition of “what is urban”– administrative boundaries– population density, etc.

Page 7: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Balitmore, MD: Well-developed city center

Diffuse boundary between urban and natural environment

Landsat TM multi-spectral image

Page 8: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Las Vegas, NV:Indistinct city center

Distinct boundary between urban and natural environments

Landsat TM multi-spectral image

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Riyadh, Saudi Arabia:Intermediate case

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Demographic/Socioeconomic Patterns

• Census data lack spatial details and are infrequently updated (not globally available)

• Remote sensing is useful for monitoring urban growth in developing countries

• Need ancillary data plus repeat temporal coverage from remote sensing

• Important to integrate physical and socioeconomic variables

Page 11: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Example

Pozzi and Small (2002) produced a study of relationship between population density (from US census) and vegetation cover (from Landsat TM)

Page 12: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

NYC Population DensityNYC Vegetation Fraction

(source: US Census) (source: Landsat TM)

Linear inverse correlation between population and vegetation fraction

Page 13: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Urban Heat Island Monitoring

• Project ATLANTA (Atlanta Land-use Analysis: Temperature and Air-quality)

• Uses remote sensing to observe, measure, and monitor impacts of rapid urban growth

Page 14: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Atlanta - Daytime ImageAtlanta - Nighttime Image

ATLAS Thermal Images of Atlanta, Georgia

Page 15: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

City Lights Imagery

• Uses visible band of the Operational Linescan System (on board the DMSP satellite)

• Useful for making global inventories of human settlements

• Spatial resolution of 1km• Relationships between city lights and socioeconomic variables such as population density, economic activity, electric power consumption, etc.

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Earth Lights from OLS

Page 17: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Measurements of Pollution in the Troposphere (MOPITT)

Carbon monoxide plumes from China22 km spatial resolution, 640 km FOV

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Disaster Monitoring• Volcanic eruptions• Tornados• Hurricanes• Oil spills• Earthquakes• War/terrorism• Floods

Page 19: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

ASTER image of Maryland tornado pathbefore

after

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AVHRR image of Hurricane Floyd

September 1999

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RADARSAT image of oil spill

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ERS-2 Interferometric SAR Mapping of Ground Displacement

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Bam, IranEarthquake destruction

IKONOS image from 12/27/2003

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QuickBird Satellite Image: 65 cm spatial resolution

Flooding in Dresden, Germany August 22, 2002

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Epidemiology• Cholera virus attaches to zooplankton (copepods) and phytoplankton. Plankton plumes emanating from the Ganges are being monitored– SST and plankton can be monitored in Bay of Bengal to track this

• Hanta virus (carried by mice) correlates to changes in precipitation (El Nino) and vegetation cover, especially grasses – NDVI can be used to track these changes

• Townshend et al. found that Ebola outbreaks corresponded to changes in land use and seasonal climate patterns

Page 26: Remote Sensing of Urban Landscapes and contributions of remote sensing to the Social Sciences.

Landsat TM map of land cover near Kikwit, Zaire (location where Ebola outbreaks were first reported in 1995)

pink=cleared areasgreen=jungle