Simon Donike;Cesar Aybar;Luis Gómez-Chova;Freddie Kalaitzis
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Remote sensing super-resolution aims to enhance the spatial details of satellite images by introducing meaningful high-frequency features while avoiding hallucinations and spectral distortions. High-resolution imagery is usually not publicly available, whereas low-resolution imagery is freely available with a much higher revisit rate, such as the Sentinel-2 multispectral imaging mission. Cross-sensor super-resolution has the potential to bridge this gap, providing high spatial and temporal resolution imagery which are otherwise unavailable for many remote sensing users and applications. With the recent advancements in diffusion models, many methodologies have emerged which take advantage of their generative power to perform super-resolution. We propose an adapted latent diffusion approach, since image diffusion is computationally prohibitive to be applied to large Earth observation datasets. Contrary to standard latent diffusion, we encode the low-resolution image to condition the diffusion process, forcing better spectral consistency with the input imagery. The model includes visible and near-infrared bands. To ensure trustworthy results, we utilize the probabilistic nature of diffusion models to generate pixel-level uncertainty maps. This confidence metric is crucial for real-world applications, such as environmental monitoring, land cover classification, and change detection, where accurate surface feature reconstruction and spectral consistency are essential. The uncertainty map allows users to evaluate the reliability of the product for these tasks. The proposed model super-resolves Sentinel-2 imagery at 10 to 2.5 m and is the first multispectral remote sensing (RS) super-resolution diffusion model efficient enough to process large-scale RS datasets, as well as the only model providing a pixelwise uncertainty metric.
期刊介绍:
The IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing addresses the growing field of applications in Earth observations and remote sensing, and also provides a venue for the rapidly expanding special issues that are being sponsored by the IEEE Geosciences and Remote Sensing Society. The journal draws upon the experience of the highly successful “IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing” and provide a complementary medium for the wide range of topics in applied earth observations. The ‘Applications’ areas encompasses the societal benefit areas of the Global Earth Observations Systems of Systems (GEOSS) program. Through deliberations over two years, ministers from 50 countries agreed to identify nine areas where Earth observation could positively impact the quality of life and health of their respective countries. Some of these are areas not traditionally addressed in the IEEE context. These include biodiversity, health and climate. Yet it is the skill sets of IEEE members, in areas such as observations, communications, computers, signal processing, standards and ocean engineering, that form the technical underpinnings of GEOSS. Thus, the Journal attracts a broad range of interests that serves both present members in new ways and expands the IEEE visibility into new areas.