Passive unmanned sky spectroscopy for remote bird classification
(2011) Conference on Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology XIII/18th International Symposium on Remote Sensing 8174.- Abstract
- We present a method based on passive spectroscopy with aim to remotely study flying birds. A compact spectrometer is continuously recording spectra of a small section of the sky, waiting for birds to obscure part of the field-of-view when they pass the field in flight. In such situations the total light intensity received through the telescope, looking straight up, will change very rapidly as compared to the otherwise slowly varying sky light. On passage of a bird, both the total intensity and the spectral shape of the captured light changes notably. A camera aimed in the same direction as the telescope, although with a wider field-of-view, is triggered by the sudden intensity changes in the spectrometer to record additional information,... (More)
- We present a method based on passive spectroscopy with aim to remotely study flying birds. A compact spectrometer is continuously recording spectra of a small section of the sky, waiting for birds to obscure part of the field-of-view when they pass the field in flight. In such situations the total light intensity received through the telescope, looking straight up, will change very rapidly as compared to the otherwise slowly varying sky light. On passage of a bird, both the total intensity and the spectral shape of the captured light changes notably. A camera aimed in the same direction as the telescope, although with a wider field-of-view, is triggered by the sudden intensity changes in the spectrometer to record additional information, which may be used for studies of migration and orientation. Example results from a trial are presented and discussed. The study is meant to explore the information that could be gathered and extracted with the help of a spectrometer connected to a telescope. Information regarding the color, size and height of flying birds is discussed. Specifically, an application for passive distance determination utilizing the atmospheric oxygen A-band absorption at around 760 nm is discussed. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
https://lup.lub.lu.se/record/2594833
- author
- Lundin, Patrik
LU
; Brydegaard, Mikkel
LU
; Cocola, Lorenzo
LU
; Runemark, Anna
LU
; Åkesson, Susanne
LU
and Svanberg, Sune LU
- organization
- publishing date
- 2011
- type
- Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
- publication status
- published
- subject
- keywords
- Remote sensing, passive optical spectroscopy, bird migration, bird, classification, diurnal migration, Fraunhofer line discrimination
- host publication
- Remote Sensing For Agriculture, Ecosystems, And Hydrology XIII
- volume
- 8174
- publisher
- SPIE
- conference name
- Conference on Remote Sensing for Agriculture, Ecosystems, and Hydrology XIII/18th International Symposium on Remote Sensing
- conference location
- Prague, Czech Republic
- conference dates
- 2011-09-19 - 2011-09-21
- external identifiers
-
- wos:000302735700019
- scopus:80455179625
- ISSN
- 0277-786X
- 1996-756X
- DOI
- 10.1117/12.898468
- language
- English
- LU publication?
- yes
- id
- 46d5f2eb-7a98-4ecf-a798-16fb9d409ab6 (old id 2594833)
- date added to LUP
- 2016-04-01 09:48:43
- date last changed
- 2025-04-04 14:51:25
@inproceedings{46d5f2eb-7a98-4ecf-a798-16fb9d409ab6, abstract = {{We present a method based on passive spectroscopy with aim to remotely study flying birds. A compact spectrometer is continuously recording spectra of a small section of the sky, waiting for birds to obscure part of the field-of-view when they pass the field in flight. In such situations the total light intensity received through the telescope, looking straight up, will change very rapidly as compared to the otherwise slowly varying sky light. On passage of a bird, both the total intensity and the spectral shape of the captured light changes notably. A camera aimed in the same direction as the telescope, although with a wider field-of-view, is triggered by the sudden intensity changes in the spectrometer to record additional information, which may be used for studies of migration and orientation. Example results from a trial are presented and discussed. The study is meant to explore the information that could be gathered and extracted with the help of a spectrometer connected to a telescope. Information regarding the color, size and height of flying birds is discussed. Specifically, an application for passive distance determination utilizing the atmospheric oxygen A-band absorption at around 760 nm is discussed.}}, author = {{Lundin, Patrik and Brydegaard, Mikkel and Cocola, Lorenzo and Runemark, Anna and Åkesson, Susanne and Svanberg, Sune}}, booktitle = {{Remote Sensing For Agriculture, Ecosystems, And Hydrology XIII}}, issn = {{0277-786X}}, keywords = {{Remote sensing; passive optical spectroscopy; bird migration; bird; classification; diurnal migration; Fraunhofer line discrimination}}, language = {{eng}}, publisher = {{SPIE}}, title = {{Passive unmanned sky spectroscopy for remote bird classification}}, url = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.898468}}, doi = {{10.1117/12.898468}}, volume = {{8174}}, year = {{2011}}, }