Kamis, 19 Januari 2012
By:
Edu-blogger
On: 19.21
Remote Sensing X ray application
Remote sensing can be defined as the collection of data about an object from a distance. Humans and many other types of animals accomplish this task with aid of eyes or by the sense of smell or hearing. Geographers use the technique of remote sensing to monitor or measure phenomena found in the Earth's lithosphere, biosphere, hydrosphere, and atmosphere. Remote sensing of the environment by geographers is usually done with the help of mechanical devices known as remote sensors. These gadgets have a greatly improved ability to receive and record information about an object without any physical contact. Often, these sensors are positioned away from the object of interest by using helicopters, planes, and satellites. Most sensing devices record information about an object by measuring an object's transmission of electromagnetic energy from reflecting and radiating surfaces.
Remote sensing imagery has many applications in mapping land-use and cover, agriculture, soils mapping, forestry, city planning, archaeological investigations, military observation, and geomorphological surveying, among other uses. For example, foresters use aerial photographs for preparing forest cover maps, locating possible access roads, and measuring quantities of trees harvested. Specialized photography using color infrared film has also been used to detect disease and insect damage in forest trees.
The simplest form of remote sensing uses photographic cameras to record information from visible or near infrared wavelengths (Table 2e-1). In the late 1800s, cameras were positioned above the Earth's surface in balloons or kites to take oblique aerial photographs of the landscape. During World War I, aerial photography played an important role in gathering information about the position and movements of enemy troops. These photographs were often taken from airplanes. After the war, civilian use of aerial photography from airplanes began with the systematic vertical imaging of large areas of Canada, the United States, and Europe. Many of these images were used to construct topographic and other types of reference maps of the natural and human-made features found on the Earth's surface.
Table 2e-1: Major regions of the electromagnetic spectrum.
Region Name Wavelength Comments
Gamma Ray < 0.03 nanometers Entirely absorbed by the Earth's atmosphere and not available for remote sensing.
X-ray 0.03 to 30 nanometers Entirely absorbed by the Earth's atmosphere and not available for remote sensing.
Ultraviolet 0.03 to 0.4 micrometers Wavelengths from 0.03 to 0.3 micrometers absorbed by ozone in the Earth's atmosphere.
Photographic Ultraviolet 0.3 to 0.4 micrometers Available for remote sensing the Earth. Can be imaged with photographic film.
Visible 0.4 to 0.7 micrometers Available for remote sensing the Earth. Can be imaged with photographic film.
Infrared 0.7 to 100 micrometers Available for remote sensing the Earth. Can be imaged with photographic film.
Reflected Infrared 0.7 to 3.0 micrometers Available for remote sensing the Earth. Near Infrared 0.7 to 0.9 micrometers. Can be imaged with photographic film.
Thermal Infrared 3.0 to 14 micrometers Available for remote sensing the Earth. This wavelength cannot be captured with photographic film. Instead, mechanical sensors are used to image this wavelength band.
Microwave or Radar 0.1 to 100 centimeters Longer wavelengths of this band can pass through clouds, fog, and rain. Images using this band can be made with sensors that actively emit microwaves.
Radio > 100 centimeters Not normally used for remote sensing the Earth.
The development of color photography following World War II gave a more natural depiction of surface objects. Color aerial photography also greatly increased the amount of information gathered from an object. The human eye can differentiate many more shades of color than tones of gray (Figure 2e-1 and 2e-2). In 1942, Kodak developed color infrared film, which recorded wavelengths in the near-infrared part of the electromagnetic spectrum. This film type had good haze penetration and the ability to determine the type and health of vegetation.
Figure 2e-1: The rows of color tiles are replicated in the right as complementary gray tones. On the left, we can make out 18 to 20 different shades of color. On the right, only 7 shades of gray can be distinguished.
Figure 2e-2: Comparison of black and white and color images of the same scene. Note how the increased number of tones found on the color image make the scene much easier to interpret. (Source: University of California at Berkley - Earth Sciences and Map Library).
Satellite Remote Sensing
In the 1960s, a revolution in remote sensing technology began with the deployment of space satellites. From their high vantage-point, satellites have a greatly extended view of the Earth's surface. The first meteorological satellite, TIROS-1 (Figure 2e-3), was launched by the United States using an Atlas rocket on April 1, 1960. This early weather satellite used vidicon cameras to scan wide areas of the Earth's surface. Early satellite remote sensors did not use conventional film to produce their images. Instead, the sensors digitally capture the images using a device similar to a television camera. Once captured, this data is then transmitted electronically to receiving stations found on the Earth's surface. The image below (Figure 2e-4) is from TIROS-7 of a mid-latitude cyclone off the coast of New Zealand.
Figure 2e-3: TIROS-1 satellite. (Source: NASA - Remote Sensing Tutorial).
Figure 2e-4: TIROS-7 image of a mid-latitude cyclone off the coast of New Zealand, August 24, 1964. (Source: NASA - Looking at Earth From Space).
Today, the GOES (Geostationary Operational Environmental Satellite) system of satellites provides most of the remotely sensed weather information for North America. To cover the complete continent and adjacent oceans two satellites are employed in a geostationary orbit. The western half of North America and the eastern Pacific Ocean is monitored by GOES-10, which is directly above the equator and 135° West longitude. The eastern half of North America and the western Atlantic are cover by GOES-8. The GOES-8 satellite is located overhead of the equator and 75° West longitude. Advanced sensors aboard the GOES satellite produce a continuous data stream so images can be viewed at any instance. The imaging sensor produces visible and infrared images of the Earth's terrestrial surface and oceans (Figure 2e-5). Infrared images can depict weather conditions even during the night. Another sensor aboard the satellite can determine vertical temperature profiles, vertical moisture profiles, total precipitable water, and atmospheric stability.
Figure 2e-5: Color image from GOES-8 of hurricanes Madeline and Lester off the coast of Mexico, October 17, 1998. (Source: NASA - Looking at Earth From Space).
In the 1970s, the second revolution in remote sensing technology began with the deployment of the Landsat satellites. Since this 1972, several generations of Landsat satellites with their Multispectral Scanners (MSS) have been providing continuous coverage of the Earth for almost 30 years. Current, Landsat satellites orbit the Earth's surface at an altitude of approximately 700 kilometers. Spatial resolution of objects on the ground surface is 79 x 56 meters. Complete coverage of the globe requires 233 orbits and occurs every 16 days. The Multispectral Scanner records a zone of the Earth's surface that is 185 kilometers wide in four wavelength bands: band 4 at 0.5 to 0.6 micrometers, band 5 at 0.6 to 0.7 micrometers, band 6 at 0.7 to 0.8 micrometers, and band 7 at 0.8 to 1.1 micrometers. Bands 4 and 5 receive the green and red wavelengths in the visible light range of the electromagnetic spectrum. The last two bands image near-infrared wavelengths. A second sensing system was added to Landsat satellites launched after 1982. This imaging system, known as the Thematic Mapper, records seven wavelength bands from the visible to far-infrared portions of the electromagnetic spectrum (Figure 2e-6). In addition, the ground resolution of this sensor was enhanced to 30 x 20 meters. This modification allows for greatly improved clarity of imaged objects.
Figure 2e-6: The Landsat 7 enhanced Thematic Mapper instrument. (Source: Landsat 7 Home Page).
The usefulness of satellites for remote sensing has resulted in several other organizations launching their own devices. In France, the SPOT (Satellite Pour l'Observation de la Terre) satellite program has launched five satellites since 1986. Since 1986, SPOT satellites have produced more than 10 million images. SPOT satellites use two different sensing systems to image the planet. One sensing system produces black and white panchromatic images from the visible band (0.51 to 0.73 micrometers) with a ground resolution of 10 x 10 meters. The other sensing device is multispectral capturing green, red, and reflected infrared bands at 20 x 20 meters (Figure 2d-7). SPOT-5, which was launched in 2002, is much improved from the first four versions of SPOT satellites. SPOT-5 has a maximum ground resolution of 2.5 x 2.5 meters in both panchromatic mode and multispectral operation.
Figure 2e-7: SPOT false-color image of the southern portion of Manhatten Island and part of Long Island, New York. The bridges on the image are (left to right): Brooklyn Bridge, Manhattan Bridge, and the Williamsburg Bridge. (Source: SPOT Image).
Radarsat-1 was launched by the Canadian Space Agency in November, 1995. As a remote sensing device, Radarsat is quite different from the Landsat and SPOT satellites. Radarsat is an active remote sensing system that transmits and receives microwave radiation. Landsat and SPOT sensors passively measure reflected radiation at wavelengths roughly equivalent to those detected by our eyes. Radarsat's microwave energy penetrates clouds, rain, dust, or haze and produces images regardless of the Sun's illumination allowing it to image in darkness. Radarsat images have a resolution between 8 to 100 meters. This sensor has found important applications in crop monitoring, defence surveillance, disaster monitoring, geologic resource mapping, sea-ice mapping and monitoring, oil slick detection, and digital elevation modeling (Figure 2e-8).
Figure 2e-8: Radarsat image acquired on March 21, 1996, over Bathurst Island in Nunavut, Canada. This image shows Radarsat's ability to distinguish different types of bedrock. The light shades on this image (C) represent areas of limestone, while the darker regions (B) are composed of sedimentary siltstone. The very dark area marked A is Bracebridge Inlet which joins the Arctic ocean. (Source: Canadian Centre for Remote Sensing - Geological Mapping Bathurst Island, Nunavut, Canada March 21, 1996).
Principles of Object Identification
Most people have no problem identifying objects from photographs taken from an oblique angle. Such views are natural to the human eye and are part of our everyday experience. However, most remotely sensed images are taken from an overhead or vertical perspective and from distances quite removed from ground level. Both of these circumstances make the interpretation of natural and human-made objects somewhat difficult. In addition, images obtained from devices that receive and capture electromagnetic wavelengths outside human vision can present views that are quite unfamiliar.
To overcome the potential difficulties involved in image recognition, professional image interpreters use a number of characteristics to help them identify remotely sensed objects. Some of these characteristics include:
Shape: this characteristic alone may serve to identify many objects. Examples include the long linear lines of highways, the intersecting runways of an airfield, the perfectly rectangular shape of buildings, or the recognizable shape of an outdoor baseball diamond (Figure 2e-9).
Figure 2e-9: Yankee stadium in Bronx, New York. Baseball stadiums have an obvious shape that can be easily recognized even from vertical aerial photographs. (Source: Google Earth).
Size: noting the relative and absolute sizes of objects is important in their identification. The scale of the image determines the absolute size of an object. As a result, it is very important to recognize the scale of the image to be analyzed.
Image Tone or Color: all objects reflect or emit specific signatures of electromagnetic radiation. In most cases, related types of objects emit or reflect similar wavelengths of radiation. Also, the types of recording device and recording media produce images that are reflective of their sensitivity to particular range of radiation. As a result, the interpreter must be aware of how the object being viewed will appear on the image examined. For example, on color infrared images vegetation has a color that ranges from pink to red rather than the usual tones of green.
Pattern: many objects arrange themselves in typical patterns. This is especially true of human-made phenomena. For example, orchards have a systematic arrangement imposed by a farmer, while natural vegetation usually has a random or chaotic pattern (Figure 2e-10).
Figure 2e-10: Black and white aerial photograph of natural coniferous vegetation (left) and adjacent apple orchards (center and right).
Shadow: shadows can sometimes be used to get a different view of an object. For example, an overhead photograph of a towering smokestack or a radio transmission tower normally presents an identification problem. This difficulty can be over come by photographing these objects at Sun angles that cast shadows. These shadows then display the shape of the object on the ground. Shadows can also be a problem to interpreters because they often conceal things found on the Earth's surface.
Texture: imaged objects display some degree of coarseness or smoothness. This characteristic can sometimes be useful in object interpretation. For example, we would normally expect to see textural differences when comparing an area of grass with a field corn. Texture, just like object size, is directly related to the scale of the image.
Study Guide
Additional Readings
Internet Weblinks Citation: Pidwirny, M. (2006). "Introduction to Geographic Information Systems". Fundamentals of Physical Geography, 2nd Edition. Date Viewed. http://www.physicalgeography.net/fundamentals/2e.html
Selasa, 03 Januari 2012
remote sensing
By:
Edu-blogger
On: 23.34
X-Ray Powder Diffraction
This handout provides background
on
the use and theory of X-ray
powder
diffraction. Examples of
applications of
this method to geologic studies
are
provided.
Introduction
Rocks, sediments, and precipitates
are
examples of geologic materials
that are
composed of minerals. Numerous
analytical techniques are used to
characterize these materials. One
of
these methods, X-ray powder
diffraction
(XRD), is an instrumental
technique that
is used to identify minerals, as
well as
other crystalline materials. In
many
geologic investigations, XRD
complements other mineralogical
methods, including optical light
microscopy, electron microprobe
microscopy, and scanning electron
microscopy. XRD provides the
researcher with a fast and
reliable tool for
routine mineral identification.
XRD is
particularly useful for
identifying finegrained
minerals and mixtures or
intergrowths of minerals that may
not
lend themselves to analysis by
other
techniques. XRD can provide
additional
information beyond basic
identification.
If the sample is a mixture, XRD
data can
be analyzed to determine the
proportion
of the different minerals
present. Other
information obtained can include
the
degree of crystallinity of the
mineral(s)
present, possible deviations of
the
minerals from their ideal
compositions
(presence of element
substitutions and
solid solutions), the structural
state of the
minerals (which can be used to
deduce
temperatures and (or) pressures
of
formation), and the degree of
hydration
for minerals that contain water
in their
structure. Some mineralogical
samples
analyzed by XRD are too fine
grained to
be identified by optical light
microscopy.
XRD does not, however, provide
the
quantitative compositional data
obtained
by the electron microprobe or me
textural
and qualitative compositional
data
obtained by the scanning electron
microscope.
Theory and Methodology
The three-dimensional structure
of
nonamorphous materials, such as
minerals, is defined by regular,
repeating
planes of atoms that form a
crystal
lattice. When a focused X-ray
beam
interacts with these planes of
atoms, part
of the beam is transmitted, part
is
absorbed by the sample, part is
refracted
and scattered, and part is
diffracted.
Diffraction of an X-ray beam by a
crystalline solid is analogous to
diffraction of light by droplets
of water,
producing the familiar rainbow.
X-rays
are diffracted by each mineral
differently, depending on what
atoms
make up the crystal lattice and
how these
atoms are arranged.
In X-ray powder diffractometry,
X-rays
are generated within a sealed
tube that is
under vacuum. A current is
applied that
heats a filament within the tube,
the
higher the current the greater
the number
of electrons emitted from the
filament.
This generation of electrons is
analogous
to the production of electrons in
a
television picture tube. A high
voltage,
typically 15-60 kilovolts, is
applied
within the tube. This high
voltage
accelerates the electrons, which
then hit a
target, commonly made of copper.
When
these electrons hit the target,
X-rays are
produced. The wavelength of these
Xrays
is characteristic of that target.
These
X-rays are collimated and
directed onto
the sample, which has been ground
to a
fine powder (typically to produce
particle
sizes of less than 10 microns). A
detector detects the X-ray
signal; the
signal is then processed either
by a
microprocessor or electronically,
converting the signal to a count
rate.
Changing the angle between the
X-ray
source, the sample, and the
detector at a
controlled rate between preset
limits is an
X-ray scan (figs. 1 and 2).
When an X-ray beam hits a sample
and
is diffracted, we can measure the
distances between the planes of
the
atoms mat constitute the sample
by
applying Bragg's Law. Bragg's Law
is
Figure 1. Simplified sketch of
one
possible configuration of the X-ray
source (X-ray tube), the X-ray
detector,
and the sample during an X-ray scan.
In
this configuration, the X-ray tube and
the
detector both move through the angle
theta (q), and the sample
remains
stationary.
n l
=
2 d sin q, where the integer n is the
order of the diffracted beam, 1
is the
wavelength of the incident X-ray
beam, d
is the distance between adjacent
planes
of atoms (the d-spacings),
and q is
the
angle of incidence of the X-ray
beam.
Since we know l and we can
measure q,
we can calculate the d-spacings.
The
geometry of an XRD unit is
designed to
accommodate this measurement
(fig. 1).
The characteristic set of d-spacings
generated in a typical X-ray scan
provides a unique
"fingerprint" of the
mineral or minerals present in
the
sample. When properly
interpreted, by
comparison with standard
reference
patterns and measurements, this
"fingerprint" allows
for identification of
the material.
Applications
XRD has a wide range of
applications
in geology, material science,
environmental science, chemistry,
forensic science, and the
pharmaceutical
industry, among others. At the
U.S.
Geological Survey, researchers
use XRD
to characterize geologic
materials from a
wide variety of settings; a few
examples
follow.
Mineral-Environmental
Studies
In studies of areas affected by
acid
mine drainage, the identification
of
secondary minerals and
fine-grained
precipitates is a critical
element. Acid is
generated when iron sulfide
minerals,
such as pyrite, weather. Elements
derived from the alteration of
the sulfide
minerals can form secondary
minerals or
go into solution. Elements that
go into
solution may form mineral
precipitates as
conditions (temperature, acidity,
solution
composition) change. Accurate
mineralogical characterization of
the
precipitates and secondary
minerals,
together with hydrogeochemical
data,
helps us to better understand the
solubility, transport, and
storage of
metals.
Ore Genesis Studies
Minerals form under specific
ranges of
temperature and pressure.
Mineralogical
identification of ore minerals
and
associated minerals, including
finegrained
hydrothermal alteration minerals,
provides evidence used to deduce
the
conditions under which ore
deposits
formed and the conditions under
which,
in many cases, they were
subsequently
altered.
Predictive
Stratigraphic
Analysis
Mineralogical characteristics of
paleosols (ancient buried soil
horizons)
and underclays (the fine-grained
detrital
material lying immediately
beneath a
coal bed) have been instrumental
in
correlating coal zones from the
Appalachian basin into the
Western
Interior basin. They have been
the key to
quantifying the paleolatitudinal
climate
gradient in North America during
the late
Middle Pennsylvanian.
Remote-Sensing
Studies
Mineralogical analysis by XRD is
used
in conjunction with remotely
sensed data
in several research
investigations. XRD
is used to identify the minerals
composing clay-rich, hydrothermally
altered rocks that occur on
several
Cascade volcanoes. Such rocks are
believed to play an important
role in the
generation of large landslides
and
mudflows. XRD is used to analyze
saline minerals, including
borates.
Many saline hydrate minerals
produce
diagnostic spectral bands, and
spectral
data provide a basis for mineral
exploration using remote-sensing
data.
Figure 2. Example of an X-ray
powder diffractogram produced during an X-ray scan.
The peaks represent positions where
the X-ray beam has been diffracted by the
crystal lattice. The set of d-spacings
(the distance between adjacent planes of atoms),
which represent the unique “fingerprint”
of the mineral, can easily be calculated from
the 2-theta (2q) values shown. The use
of degrees 2-theta in depicting X-ray powder
diffraction scans is a matter of
convention and can easily be related back to the
geometry of the instrument, shown in
figure 1. The angle and the d-spacings are
related by Bragg’s Law, as described
in the text.
Analysis of airborne imaging
spectrometer data can directly
map
mineral occurrences by detecting
diagnostic spectral absorption
bands, the
shape and position of which are
determined by individual mineral
structures. A detailed knowledge
of
sample mineralogy, provided at
least in
part by XRD, is required to
understand
the observed spectral absorption
features.
Genesis of Coal Beds
XRD is one of the primary tools
used
to evaluate the lateral and
vertical
variations in mineral matter and
major,
minor, and trace elements in coal
beds.
These data are used to help
determine the
impact of geologic and
geochemical
processes on coal bed formation
in order
to understand and predict both
inorganic
and organic variability within
and among
mineable coal beds.
Mineral-Resource
Assessments
Mineralogical characterization
provides part of the data
required to
determine the particular kind of
mineral
deposits encountered in
mineral-resource
assessment studies. XRD allows us
to
identify fine-grained mixtures of
minerals found in associated
gangue and
alteration assemblages, which
cannot be
resolved by other methods.
-Prepared by
Marta J.K. Flohr
For more
information, please contact:
Frank T. Dulong
U.S. Geological Survey, MS 956
Reston, VA 20192
Telephone: (703) 648-6416
E-mail: fdulong@usgs.gov
John C. Jackson
U.S. Geological Survey, MS 954
Reston, VA 20192
Telephone: (703) 648-6321
E-mail: jjackson@usgs.gov
U.S. Department of the Interior
U.S. Geological Survey May 1997
Kamis, 29 Desember 2011
REMOTE
By:
Edu-blogger
On: 17.08
The world's first remote controls were radio-frequency devices that
directed German naval vessels to crash into Allied boats during WWI. In
WWII, remote controls detonated bombs for the first time. The end of the
great wars left scientists with a brilliant technology and nowhere to
apply it. Sixty years later, some of us spend an hour looking for the
remote before we remember there are buttons on the TV.
In this article, we'll examine the infrared technology used in most home theaters, look at the difference between IR and RF remotes, find out the difference between a "universal" and a "learning" remote and check out some of the other high-tech features you can find on remotes today, like PC connectivity, RF extenders and macro commands
Americans, you probably pick up a TV remote control at least once or twice a day. Let's look inside and see how they work. Here is the remote we will be dissecting today:
The remote control's job is to wait for you to press a key, and then to translate that key-press into infrared (pronounced "infra-red") light signals that are received by the TV. When you take off the back cover of the control you can see that there is really just 1 part visible: a printed circuit board that contains the electronics and the battery contacts.
The components that you see here are typical for most remotes. You
can see an integrated circuit (also known as a chip)
labeled "TA11835". The chip is packaged in what is known as an 18
pin Dual Inline Package, or a DIP. To the
right of the chip you can see a diode, a transistor (black, with three
leads), a resonator (yellow), two resistors (green) and a capacitor
(dark blue). Next to the battery contacts there is a resistor (green)
and a capacitor (tan disk). In this circuit, the chip can detect when a
key is pressed. It then translates the key into a sequence something
like morse code, with a different sequence for each different key. The
chip sends that signal out to the transistor to amplify the signal and
make it stronger.
.
source
In this article, we'll examine the infrared technology used in most home theaters, look at the difference between IR and RF remotes, find out the difference between a "universal" and a "learning" remote and check out some of the other high-tech features you can find on remotes today, like PC connectivity, RF extenders and macro commands
Americans, you probably pick up a TV remote control at least once or twice a day. Let's look inside and see how they work. Here is the remote we will be dissecting today:
The remote control's job is to wait for you to press a key, and then to translate that key-press into infrared (pronounced "infra-red") light signals that are received by the TV. When you take off the back cover of the control you can see that there is really just 1 part visible: a printed circuit board that contains the electronics and the battery contacts.
source
spirit of scientist
By:
Edu-blogger
On: 17.00
open your eyes to every problem that make our mind and our sense more strong because problem is way of ALLAH tomake we become strong and smart
Rabu, 18 Agustus 2010
semangat ilmuan
By:
Edu-blogger
On: 00.43
fisika ialah pelajaran yang sebenarnya meninjau segala sesuatu dari kenyataan atau fakta untuk memperoleh gambaran yang jelas kita harus banyak berlatih, berexperimen dan temukan hal baru karena jiwa kita adalah jiwa muda meski usia telah menua, namun semangat janganlah menua tetaplah maju dan semangat para peneliti maju untuk ilmu pengetahuan
hiduplah untuk kemajuan dunia dan karenanya niatlah karena beribadah sehingga untuk setiap ilmu yang kita dapat kita bagi untuk kemajuan umat manusia, iklas jujur dan maju untuk ilmu pengetahuan
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