Optical imagery exercise

View and change symbology of a satellite image

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Optical medium-resolution imagery

Imagery is usually supplied by MAGIC as an RGB synthesis. Add a satellite image to the map and style it.

  1. Drag image file LC09_L1GT_220108_2024-04-07_BGRNIR.tif into the project. This is a Landsat-9 medium-resolution image (30m/pixel), it has 4 spectral bands (1: Blue; 2: Green; 3: Red, 4: Near Infra Red) and 16-bit depth pixels.

  2. Go to Image Properties and then to the Symbology tab. To create a true-color composite, set for Red Band 3, for Green - Band 2, and for Blue - Band 1. Click OK. In general, this creates an acceptable image representation.

Optical high-resolution imagery

  1. Low- and medium resolution images are crucial for sea-ice, snow coverage assessment, and monitoring matters. But, for studying an area in more detail, high-resolution and very-high resolution data is needed. Add WV2_2020-02-16_RGB.tif image to the map view.

SAR low-resolution imagery

  1. Add S1A_IW_GRDH_1SSH_20240409T082739_0494_S_1.8bit.jp2 image to map view. This is a Sentinel-1 image captured in HH-polarization 2 days after the Landsat image above. Snow-covered surfaces, dry soil, man-made objects, and thick ice usually look bright on SAR images, while water, thin ice, and wet soil - are much darker. SAR usually acquires images from a low angle, this creates shadows in mountain areas, as no signal back-scattered from them. You may also notice the Foreshortening and Layover effects.Compare this image with the more recent one S1A_IW_GRDH_1SSH_20240807T082737_E354_S_1.8bit.jp2.

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