=>
The SPOT4 (Take5) is already 3 months old and will only last for one month and a half. For the in-situ measurements among the users teams, there is also only one month left.
On that occasion, we just created a quicklook page that shows all the images acquired between January the 31st and April the 15th.
With the help of Vincent Poulain (of Thales, funded by CNES Image Quality service (thank you!)), large improvements have been made on the settings for ortho-rectification SIGMA software, in order to eliminate much of the poor correlations that disrupted our measurements. With the exception of two very uniform rainforest sites (Borneo and Sumatra), the registration performance for all sites are now excellent. Selection thresholds are however a little too strict for two other rainforest sites (Gabon and Congo), where most images are rejected. The work is going on…
Despite very bad weather in many places, especially in France early this year, SPOT4 managed to take some beautiful pictures without clouds on almost all sites. The quick-looks from images clear enough to be ortho-rectified are now available on this blog. On many of these sites (in Brittany, Alsace, Sumatra, China), it will require using partially cloudy images to obtain a correct repetitivity. You may judge for yourself that the repeatability of 5 days is absolutely necessary (in some cases even a little insufficient) to properly monitor vegetation growth.
Really its a good scientific work , but still we needto add a penetrating wave length to the future SPOTspictures through the clouds or the snow . With Regards Dr. kassim M. ALsaadi
Thank you ! You are right, if you want to build operational use from remote sensing data, you must be able to provide results even if the sky is cloudy for a long period of time. Many colleagues work on the complementarity of Radar and High Resolution optics, and some work on the complementarity of High and Coarse resolution optical sensors.\nSentinel-2 will be seconded by Sentinel-1 (a radar) and Sentinel-3 (coarse resolution optics).