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We will work with 6 images of the Monterey Bay Area:

AVIRIS_2014-10-27: radiance: image & header & readme


AVIRIS_2015-10-02: radiance: image & header & readme (not good spatial match to other images)
Hyperion_2014-10-26: 176-band radiance: image & header
Hyperion_2015-11-06: 176-band radiance: image & header
OLI: 2014-10-28: radiance: image & header & metadata
OLI: 2015-11-16: radiance: image & header & metadata

Options:
1. Direct comparison of the three different data sets
The 2014 data from the three instruments were collected on 3 consecutive days
and there is good overlap in the coverage. There will be some atmospheric
differences, but the majority of the differences should be instrumental in nature
(spectral/spatial resolution, calibration, noise, etc.)

Area of overlap is the northern half of the Hyperion image.

2. Look for change from 2014-2015


Overlap in coverage is excellent for the 2 Hyperion images, the OLI imagery, and
the 2014 AVIRIS image. The 2015 AVIRIS image is not a generally good match.
Compare change detection results for the Hyperion and OLI images
Use AVIRIS 2014 data as a check on the Hyperion data quality

To create an image subset:


1. Select Basic Tools > Resize Data (Spatial/Spectral) and select an image:
LC8 OLI Landsat 8 imagery
F14. AVIRIS 2014
F15. AVIRIS 2015
EO1 Hyperion
2. Choose Spatial Subset
3. In the Select Spatial Subset window select Image
4. In the Subset by Image window, adjust the size and position of the red box to
enclose the area of interest. The AVIRIS data are the most confining, so choose
areas in the Hyperion and Landsat 8 imagery that are larger than the area in the
AVIRS data. Select OK when done.
5. Select OK in the Select Spatial Subset window.
6. Select OK in the Resize Data Input File window.
7. Look at the subset to be sure that it is what you intended.

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