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Super-resolution mapping of hyperspectral images for estimating the water-spread area of Peechi reservoir, southern India

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dc.contributor.author Shanmugam Priyaa, Sakthivel
dc.contributor.author Heltin, Genitha C.
dc.contributor.author Jeyakanthan, V. S.
dc.contributor.author Sanjeevi, Shanmugam
dc.date.accessioned 2019-12-06T05:24:27Z
dc.date.available 2019-12-06T05:24:27Z
dc.date.issued 2014
dc.identifier.citation Journal of Applied Remote Sensing en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://117.252.14.250:8080/jspui/handle/123456789/3995
dc.description.abstract Though the estimation of the water-spread area in reservoirs is often carried out by field surveys, it is time-consuming and tedious, and cannot be done periodically. To overcome this issue, satellite images are often used where the estimation is made through density slicing or conventional per-pixel classification. This results in an inaccurate estimation of reservoir capacity. The high cost and nonavailability of high-resolution images demands the use of an alternative approach that can give accurate information about the reservoir water-spread area. A hyperspectral image (Hyperion) of moderate resolution is used for the accurate estimation of the waterspread area of Peechi reservoir, southern India. The reservoir water-spread area obtained from per-pixel classification, subpixel classification, and super-resolution mapping approaches are compared with the water-spread area obtained from the ground truth hydrographic survey data. It is observed that the water-spread area estimated from the hyperspectral image by the per-pixel approach is 7.66 sq km, that by the subpixel approach is 6.34 sq km, and that by the super-resolution approach is 5.69 sq km compared to the actual area of 5.95 sq km. The classification accuracy estimated for the Hopfield neural network based super-resolution technique is 92.97%, whereas that for the conventional classifier (maximum likelihood) is 86.72%. This improved accuracy in classification resulted in an accurate estimation of water-spread area. Hence, it is inferred that super-resolution mapping applied to hyperspectral images is a computationally efficient approach for the accurate quantification of reservoir water-spread area. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher SPIE en_US
dc.subject Reservoir water-spread area en_US
dc.subject Hyperspectral image en_US
dc.subject Sub-pixel classification en_US
dc.subject Super-resolution mapping en_US
dc.title Super-resolution mapping of hyperspectral images for estimating the water-spread area of Peechi reservoir, southern India en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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