Decorrelation stretching is an image enhancement technique used to improve color contrast in multispectral remote sensing images. It reduces the correlation between image bands and spreads out (stretches) their color values so that features become easier to see. It is mainly used to enhance true-color or false-color composite images . Why Is It Needed? Remote sensing bands often have strong correlations . For example: Red and NIR bands both reflect strongly from vegetation Visible bands (R, G, B) reflect similarly from many surfaces Because of this correlation: Images look dull , low-contrast , or washed-out Important features become hard to distinguish Decorrelation stretching solves this by reducing band-to-band correlation and enhancing color differences. How Decorrelation Stretching Works 1. Identify the Correlation Between Bands Multispectral bands often show similar brightness patterns. This makes the composite image look flat. 2...
Spectral Signature A spectral signature is the unique pattern in which an object: absorbs energy reflects energy emits energy across different wavelengths of the electromagnetic spectrum. ✔ Key Points Every natural and man-made object on Earth interacts with sunlight differently. These interactions produce a distinct pattern , just like a "fingerprint". Sensors on satellites record these patterns as digital numbers (DN values) . These patterns help to identify and differentiate objects such as vegetation, soil, water, snow, buildings, minerals, etc. ✔ Examples of Spectral Signatures Healthy vegetation → High reflectance in NIR , strong absorption in red Water → Strong absorption in NIR and SWIR , low reflectance Dry soil → Gradual increase in reflectance from visible to NIR Snow → High reflectance in visible , low in SWIR ✔ Why Spectral Signature Matters It allows: Land cover classification Chan...