Mapping the wavelength position of mineral features in hyperspectral thermal infrared data

Hecker, Christoph van Ruitenbeek, Frank J. A. Bakker, Wim H. Fagbohun, Babatunde J. Riley, Dean van der Meer, Freek D. van der Werff, Harald M. A.

Mapping the wavelength position of mineral features in hyperspectral thermal infrared data

Hecker, Christoph 1van Ruitenbeek, Frank J. A. 1Bakker, Wim H. 1Fagbohun, Babatunde J. 2Riley, Dean 3van der Meer, Freek D. 1van der Werff, Harald M. A.1
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作者信息

  • 1. Univ Twente, Dept Earth Syst Anal, Fac Geoinformat Sci & Earth Observat ITC, NL-7514 AE Enschede, Netherlands
  • 2. Fed Univ Technol Akure, Dept Remote Sensing & Geosci Informat Syst, PMB 704, Akure, Nigeria
  • 3. Boor Allen Hamilton, 14151 Pk Meadow Dr, Chantilly, VA 20151 USA
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Abstract

The Wavelength Mapper is an algorithm that searches for the deepest absorption feature in each pixel of a hyperspectral image. On a per pixel basis, it extracts the wavelength position, which serves as a proxy of the mineralogy and the feature depth as a proxy for the relative abundance. This algorithm has been used with near and shortwave infrared data, but has not yet been tested on hyperspectral thermal infrared images. It is unclear what results are expected when the Wavelength Mapper algorithm is applied to hyperspectral thermal infrared data since reststrahlen features characteristically overlap in emissivity spectra. In this paper, the Wavelength Mapper is tested on a multi-flightline airborne hyperspectral TIR dataset acquired over the Yerington Batholith, Nevada. Observations were made in the 8.05-11.65 mu m wavelength range to include thermal spectral features of major rock-forming minerals, and a new color ramp is created to separate quartz-rich rocks from plagioclase-rich rocks. Our results indicate that the Wavelength Mapper creates coherent spatial patterns across flightlines. The results displayed represent different types of igneous and sedimentary rocks, as well as the products of hydro thermal alteration via different colors, mainly based on the relative abundance of quartz, feldspar and garnet, as well as mica and epidote. Comparison with published maps indicate that the Wavelength Mapper represents for each pixel a parameter value that can be linked to the spectrally dominate rock-forming mineral of that area, as mapped with traditional fieldwork methods. In conclusion, the Wavelength Mapper can be applied to airborne hyperspectral TIR data to achieve a simple, repeatable, per-pixel overview map of the dominating rock-forming mineral occurrences.

Key words

Spectral features/Mineral mapping/Thermal infrared/Longwave infrared/Minimum Wavelength Mapper

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出版年

2019
International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation

International journal of applied earth observation and geoinformation

SCI
ISSN:0303-2434
被引量9
参考文献量34
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