Table 2.
The current space and airborne satellite hyperspectral sensors [14].
Sensor | Origin | Spectral Range | No. of spectral bands | Spectral Resolution (nm) | Operational Altitude (km) | Spatial Resolution (m) | Authors | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Satellite Based | Hyperion | NASA, UK | 352–2576 | 220 | 10 | 707 (7.7 km) | 30 | Pearlman et al. [15] |
PROBA-CHRIS | ESA, UK | 415–1050 | 19 63 | 34 17 | 830 (14 km) | 17 36 | Kunkel et al. [16] | |
Airplane Based | AVIRIS | Jet Propulsion Laboratory, USA | 400–2050 | 224 | 10 | – | – | Green et al. [17] |
CASI | Itres, Canada | 380–1050 | 288 | <3.5 | 1–20 | 1–20 | Babey & Anger [18] | |
AISA | Specim, Finland | 400–970 | 244 | 3.3 | 1–20 | 1–20 | ||
HyMap | Integrated Spectronics, Australia | 440–2500 | 128 | 15 | – | – | Cocks et al. [19] | |
UAV Based | Head Well Hyperspec | Headwall Photonics, USA | 400–1000 | 270 Nano 324 Micro | 6 Nano 2.5 Micro |
<0.15 | 0.01–0.5 | Rickard et al. [20] |
UHD 185 Firefly | Cubert, Germany | 450–950 | 138 | 4 | <0.15 | 0.01–0.5 | Eckardt et al. [21] |