Revisions for Near-Infrared Camera
| January 24, 2011 - 23:26 by warren | June 19, 2013 - 09:58 by warren | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Changes to Description | |||
| - | We've been modifying cheap cameras to take infrared photos. This can be used to generate NDVI or NRG images, which is helpful in assessing vegetative health.
| + | ###Introduction
|
| - | Learn to remove the infrared filter from your camera: http://www.flickr.com/photos/lpimaging/sets/72157625698391563/with/5355456142/
| + | Vineyards, large farms, and NASA all use **near-infrared photography** for assessing plant health, usually by mounting expensive sensors on airplanes and satellites. At Public Lab, we've developed a Do-It-Yourself way to bring this technology to everyday people, enabling us to monitor our environment through quantifiable data.
|
| - | NDVI example:
| + | We are currently running a Kickstarter for a version of this camera we call the **Infragram**. [Read more about it here »](/wiki/infragram)
|
| - | <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffreywarren/5288138022/" title="Plaza San Martin, visible-infrared-NDVI by jeferonix, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5206/5288138022_312eca176a.jpg" width="500" height="133" alt="Plaza San Martin, visible-infrared-NDVI" /></a>
| + | ###What is it good for?
|
| - | NRG example:
| + | - Take pictures to examine plant health in backyard gardens, farms, parks, and nearby wetlands
|
| + | - Monitor your household plants
| ||
| + | - Teach students about plant growth and photosynthesis
| ||
| + | - Create exciting science fair projects
| ||
| + | - Generate verifiable, open environmental data
| ||
| + | - Check progress of environmental restoration projects
| ||
| + | - Document unhealthy areas of your local ecology (for instance, algal blooms)
| ||
| - | <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffreywarren/5288280756/" title="Plaza San Martin, Lima, in NRG by jeferonix, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5247/5288280756_f0902a4958.jpg" width="500" height="400" alt="Plaza San Martin, Lima, in NRG" /></a>
| + | **Here's an example of what one of our "Infragram" cameras sees (left) and the post-processing analysis which shows photosynthetic activity, or plant health (right): **
|
| - | By putting both an infrared-pass filter and an infrared-block filter on the same camera, you can get both infrared and visible light with one photograph... though the areas don't overlap. This means you can get such imagery from the air using [/tool/balloon-mapping](balloon mapping), while only risking one camera. Another alternative is to use the in-development [/tool/stereo-camera](stereo camera) being developed by the [/place/new-york-city](New York City chapter)
| + | [](http://i.publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/000/276/original/IMG_0511-split.png)
|
| + | (by Jeff Warren)
| ||
| - | <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffreywarren/5331230956/" title="Our bifocal infrared/visible filter by jeferonix, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5170/5331230956_ae6aae5123.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Our bifocal infrared/visible filter" /></a>
| + | ###Background: satellite infrared imaging
|
| - | <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/jeffreywarren/5335020092/" title="Visible/infrared of a tree from above, with bifocal filter by jeferonix, on Flickr"><img src="http://farm6.static.flickr.com/5169/5335020092_35982b1231.jpg" width="500" height="375" alt="Visible/infrared of a tree from above, with bifocal filter" /></a> | + | The study of Earth's environment from space got its start in 1972 when the first Landsat satellite was launched. The multispectral scanner it carried, like the scanners on all subsequent Landsat satellites, recorded images with both visible and near infrared light. Remote sensing scientists quickly learned that by combining visible and infrared data, they could reveal critical information about the health of vegetation. For example, the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) highlights the difference between the red and infrared wavelengths that are reflected from vegetation. Because red light is used by plants for photosynthesis but infrared light is not, NDVI allows scientists to estimate the amount of healthy foliage in every satellite image. Thousands of scientists, including landscape ecologists, global change biologists, and habitat specialists have relied on these valuable satellite-based NDVI images for decades.
|
| + | |||
| + | There are public sources of infrared photography for the US available through the Department of Agriculture -- [NAIP](http://datagateway.nrcs.usda.gov/) and [Vegscape](http://nassgeodata.gmu.edu/VegScape/) -- but this imagery is not collected when, as often, or at useable scale for individuals who are managing small plots.
| ||
| + | |||
| + | 
| ||
| + | <p><em>Caption: Normal color photo (top) and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) image. NDVI image was derived from two color channels in a single photo taken with a camera modified with a special infrared filter. Note that tree trunks, brown grass, and rocks have very low NDVI values because they are not photosynthetic. Healthy plants typically have NDVI values between 0.1 and 0.9. Images by Chris Fastie.</em>
| ||
| + | Visit the [gallery of high-res images by Chris Fastie](https://plus.google.com/photos/116103622078305917397/albums/5878196749239180465/5878198341400814034)
| ||
| + | |||
| + | ###Point & shoot infrared photography
| ||
| + | |||
| + | The goal of Public Lab's Infragram project is to bring the power of NDVI and other infrared vegetation imaging back to earth where everyone can now take close-up images of plants or landscapes and instantly learn about their health and vigor.
| ||
| + | |||
| + | 
| ||
| + | |||
| + | _Chris Fastie's [infrared/visible camera prototype](/notes/cfastie/04-21-2013/rosco)_
| ||
| + | |||
| + | We are able to tweak a single camera to capture near-infrared, green, and blue light. This allows us to photograph the "secret life of plants". We do this by filtering out the red light, and **reading infrared in its place** using a piece of carefully chosen "NGB" filter. Read more about [the development of this technique here](http://publiclab.org/notes/cfastie/04-20-2013/superblue).
| ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | 
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| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ##How we do it
| ||
| + | |||
| + | [Research by Chris Fastie](http://publiclab.org/notes/cfastie/04-20-2013/superblue) and [other Public Lab contributors](/tag/near-infrared-camera) have led to the use of a **single camera which can image in both infrared and visible light simultaneously**. The filter is just a piece of carefully chosen theater gel which was examined using [a DIY spectrometer](/wiki/spectrometer). You can use this filter to turn your webcam or cheap point-and-shoot into an infrared camera.
| ||
| + | |||
| + | ##How to process your images:
| ||
| + | |||
| + | We're working on an easy process to generate composite, infrared + visible images that will reveal new details of plant health and photosynthesis. Currently there are several approaches:
| ||
| + | |||
| + | * [Ned Horning's](/profile/nedhorning) [PhotoMonitoring plugin](/wiki/photo-monitoring-plugin)
| ||
| + | * Manual processing
| ||
| + | * [in Photoshop](/notes/warren/10-25-2011/video-tutorial-creating-infrared-composites-aerial-wetlands-imagery)
| ||
| + | * [or GIMP](/notes/warren/10-27-2011/video-tutorial-creating-false-color-ndvi-aerial-wetlands-imagery)
| ||
| + | * Using MapKnitter.org (deprecated)
| ||
| + | * Online image processing using our protoype webapp, [here](http://infrapix.pvos.org/)
| ||
| + | * Source code is on github as [infrapix-flask](https://github.com/Pioneer-Valley-Open-Science/infrapix-flask)
| ||
| + | * Command-line processing of single images and rendering of movies using a Python script. Source code is [here](https://github.com/Pioneer-Valley-Open-Science/infrapix)
| ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ###Processing overview
| ||
| + | |||
| + | We're working on a cleaner, easier way to process images, and hope to have a web app up soon which will work something like this:
| ||
| + | |||
| + | * ** 1. Calibrate.** In order to get the most meaningful data possible from your plant images, it's a good idea to "calibrate" your camera, taking into account the current lighting conditions (sunny vs. cloudy, indoors vs. outdoors) at the time that you're taking your photos: this makes it much easier to compare "plant health" images taken at different times, in different places, and by different cameras. To make this easy, we'll likely be providing an additional "white balance card" -- simply, a card that has a standard color -- in our kits. By recording an initial image that includes this card, you'll be able to use our online software to "standardize" the colors in all of your images. If you don't have a card, don't worry -- there will also be opportunities to calibrate your imagery automagically later, using our analysis software, and the results might be just as good.
| ||
| + | |||
| + | * ** 2. Take your snapshot.** "Rhododendrons -- say cheese!" Using your own camera (modded with our DIY filter), the Infragram Webcam, or the Infragram Point & Shoot, you'll record the scene of your choosing -- ideally, with some vegetation-y life forms in it. Take pictures of household plants, garden vegetables, trees -- we've grabbed a lot of useful agricultural imagery from cameras dangling from kites and balloons! The Public Lab website and mailing list are already full of examples and suggestions related to infrared photography, and it's easy to start a discussion with community members about your ideas, or ask for advice.
| ||
| + | |||
| + | * ** 3. Upload.** After you've finished an image capture session, you'll want to upload your images using the (free, open source) online software our community is developing. This will likely simply involve navigating to a particular URL and dragging-and-dropping your images onto a specified area of a webpage. Easy peasy.
| ||
| + | |||
| + | * ** 4. Analyze. ** If you thought the prior steps were fun, this step is fun +1 . We're planning on providing a suite of image analysis tools online, so that everyone from researchers to geek gardeners can analyze, tweak, modify, and re-analyze their imagery to their heart's content, extracting useful information about plant health and biomass assessment along the way.
| ||
| + | |||
| + | * ** 5. Share.** And perhaps the most exciting aspect of all: your imagery, your work, and your insights can easily be shared with the rest of the Public Lab community via this online service, the Public Lab mailing lists, and wikis and research notes at http://publiclab.org. Develop a kite-based aerial imagery project with your friends; get advice from NDVI researchers in the community as to the best techniques for yielding useful information from your garden photos; create and collaborate on new methods and protocols around DIY infrared photography. Join Public Lab's "share and share alike", open source learning community: http://publiclab.org/wiki/registration
| ||
| + | |||
| + | **Note:** Older versions of this page have been kept at the following wiki page: http://publiclab.org/wiki/near-infrared-camera-history | ||
Near-Infrared Camera
Introduction
Vineyards, large farms, and NASA all use near-infrared photography for assessing plant health, usually by mounting expensive sensors on airplanes and satellites. At Public Lab, we've developed a Do-It-Yourself way to bring this technology to everyday people, enabling us to monitor our environment through quantifiable data.
We are currently running a Kickstarter for a version of this camera we call the Infragram. Read more about it here »
What is it good for?
- Take pictures to examine plant health in backyard gardens, farms, parks, and nearby wetlands
- Monitor your household plants
- Teach students about plant growth and photosynthesis
- Create exciting science fair projects
- Generate verifiable, open environmental data
- Check progress of environmental restoration projects
- Document unhealthy areas of your local ecology (for instance, algal blooms)
**Here's an example of what one of our "Infragram" cameras sees (left) and the post-processing analysis which shows photosynthetic activity, or plant health (right): **
Background: satellite infrared imaging
The study of Earth's environment from space got its start in 1972 when the first Landsat satellite was launched. The multispectral scanner it carried, like the scanners on all subsequent Landsat satellites, recorded images with both visible and near infrared light. Remote sensing scientists quickly learned that by combining visible and infrared data, they could reveal critical information about the health of vegetation. For example, the normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) highlights the difference between the red and infrared wavelengths that are reflected from vegetation. Because red light is used by plants for photosynthesis but infrared light is not, NDVI allows scientists to estimate the amount of healthy foliage in every satellite image. Thousands of scientists, including landscape ecologists, global change biologists, and habitat specialists have relied on these valuable satellite-based NDVI images for decades.
There are public sources of infrared photography for the US available through the Department of Agriculture -- NAIP and Vegscape -- but this imagery is not collected when, as often, or at useable scale for individuals who are managing small plots.

<
p>Caption: Normal color photo (top) and normalized difference vegetation index (NDVI) image. NDVI image was derived from two color channels in a single photo taken with a camera modified with a special infrared filter. Note that tree trunks, brown grass, and rocks have very low NDVI values because they are not photosynthetic. Healthy plants typically have NDVI values between 0.1 and 0.9. Images by Chris Fastie.
Visit the gallery of high-res images by Chris Fastie
Point & shoot infrared photography
The goal of Public Lab's Infragram project is to bring the power of NDVI and other infrared vegetation imaging back to earth where everyone can now take close-up images of plants or landscapes and instantly learn about their health and vigor.

Chris Fastie's infrared/visible camera prototype
We are able to tweak a single camera to capture near-infrared, green, and blue light. This allows us to photograph the "secret life of plants". We do this by filtering out the red light, and reading infrared in its place using a piece of carefully chosen "NGB" filter. Read more about the development of this technique here.

How we do it
Research by Chris Fastie and other Public Lab contributors have led to the use of a single camera which can image in both infrared and visible light simultaneously. The filter is just a piece of carefully chosen theater gel which was examined using a DIY spectrometer. You can use this filter to turn your webcam or cheap point-and-shoot into an infrared camera.
How to process your images:
We're working on an easy process to generate composite, infrared + visible images that will reveal new details of plant health and photosynthesis. Currently there are several approaches:
- Ned Horning's PhotoMonitoring plugin
- Manual processing
- Using MapKnitter.org (deprecated)
- Online image processing using our protoype webapp, here
- Source code is on github as infrapix-flask
- Command-line processing of single images and rendering of movies using a Python script. Source code is here
Processing overview
We're working on a cleaner, easier way to process images, and hope to have a web app up soon which will work something like this:
-
** 1. Calibrate.** In order to get the most meaningful data possible from your plant images, it's a good idea to "calibrate" your camera, taking into account the current lighting conditions (sunny vs. cloudy, indoors vs. outdoors) at the time that you're taking your photos: this makes it much easier to compare "plant health" images taken at different times, in different places, and by different cameras. To make this easy, we'll likely be providing an additional "white balance card" -- simply, a card that has a standard color -- in our kits. By recording an initial image that includes this card, you'll be able to use our online software to "standardize" the colors in all of your images. If you don't have a card, don't worry -- there will also be opportunities to calibrate your imagery automagically later, using our analysis software, and the results might be just as good.
-
** 2. Take your snapshot.** "Rhododendrons -- say cheese!" Using your own camera (modded with our DIY filter), the Infragram Webcam, or the Infragram Point & Shoot, you'll record the scene of your choosing -- ideally, with some vegetation-y life forms in it. Take pictures of household plants, garden vegetables, trees -- we've grabbed a lot of useful agricultural imagery from cameras dangling from kites and balloons! The Public Lab website and mailing list are already full of examples and suggestions related to infrared photography, and it's easy to start a discussion with community members about your ideas, or ask for advice.
-
** 3. Upload.** After you've finished an image capture session, you'll want to upload your images using the (free, open source) online software our community is developing. This will likely simply involve navigating to a particular URL and dragging-and-dropping your images onto a specified area of a webpage. Easy peasy.
-
** 4. Analyze. ** If you thought the prior steps were fun, this step is fun +1 . We're planning on providing a suite of image analysis tools online, so that everyone from researchers to geek gardeners can analyze, tweak, modify, and re-analyze their imagery to their heart's content, extracting useful information about plant health and biomass assessment along the way.
-
** 5. Share.** And perhaps the most exciting aspect of all: your imagery, your work, and your insights can easily be shared with the rest of the Public Lab community via this online service, the Public Lab mailing lists, and wikis and research notes at http://publiclab.org. Develop a kite-based aerial imagery project with your friends; get advice from NDVI researchers in the community as to the best techniques for yielding useful information from your garden photos; create and collaborate on new methods and protocols around DIY infrared photography. Join Public Lab's "share and share alike", open source learning community: http://publiclab.org/wiki/registration
Note: Older versions of this page have been kept at the following wiki page: http://publiclab.org/wiki/near-infrared-camera-history
Contributors
PLOTS members who have contributed research notes or added to wiki pages on this topic:
- Chris Fastie (2)
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Activity
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On Jun 18, The creator of [GrassrootsMapping.org](http://grassrootsmapping.org) and co-founder and Research Director for the Public Laboratory for Open Technology and Science, Jeff designs mapping and civic science tools and professionally flies balloons and kites. Notable software he has created include [the vector-mapping framework Cartagen](http://cartagen.org) and [orthorectification tool MapKnitter](http://mapknitter.org), as well as open spectral database and toolkit [Spectral Workbench](http://spectralworkbench.org). He is a fellow at MIT's [Center for Civic Media](http://civic.mit.edu), on the advisory board of [Personal Democracy Media's WeGov](http://techpresident.com/topics/wegov) and an advocate of open source software, hardware, and data. He co-founded Vestal Design, a graphic/interaction design firm in 2004, and directed the Cut&Paste Labs project, a year-long series of workshops on opensource tools and web design in 2006-7 with Lima designer Diego Rotalde. Jeff holds an MS from MIT and a BA in Architecture from Yale University, and spent much of that time working with artist/technologist Natalie Jeremijenko, building robotic dogs and stuff. To find out more, visit Unterbahn.com. * https://github.com/jywarren * http://unterbahn.com * http://unterbahn.com/thesis/ updated Page: About Public Lab
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Adam-Griffith commented on Adam-Griffith's Note "Folly Beach, SC - a detailed look at a $3 million beach "restoration"" on Jun Tuesday
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Adam-Griffith commented on scaramel's Note "Video: Kitemappers" on Jun Tuesday
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On Jun 13, Caterina Scaramelli created a new Note: Video: Kitemappers
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On Jun 12, Stewart Long updated Map: Rotsoord. Utrecht, Netherlands.
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On Jun 12, Stewart Long updated Map: Rotsoord. Utrecht, Netherlands.
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On Jun 12, Stewart Long updated Map: Rotsoord. Utrecht, Netherlands.
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On Jun 12, Hagit Keysar updated Page: MapKnitter Help
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sonofaquark commented on sonofaquark's Note "Pascal's Wager" on Jun Wednesday
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On Jun 10, www.quiviracoalition.org created a new Note: Test 1
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On Jun 9, Shannon created a new Note: Public Lab community newsletter 6.9.13
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tomh4236 commented on nedhorning's Note "Canon A2200 NIR conversion" on Jun Wednesday
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On Jun 5, Adam D. Griffith is the Director of the Rivercane Restoration Project through the Program for the Study of Developed Shorelines (PSDS) at Western Carolina University. He received a BS degree in Biology from Roanoke College in 1999 (Omicron Delta Kappa) and was subsequently accepted to Teach for America. He taught 6th grade science in the Houston Independent School District in Texas for three years before becoming a kayak instructor taking him on numerous trips to the beaches of the United States, Panama, and Europe. He received his MS degree in Biology from Western Carolina University in 2008 studying the native bamboo Arundinaria gigantea. Since 2008, he has been a research scientist at PSDS where he launched coastalcare.org with the Santa Aguilla Foundation. He currently directs the communities and sea-level rise research. In 2011, he co-founded the Public Laboratory with 6 others by securing a $500,000 grant from the James S. and John L. Knight Foundation. As a result, his writings can be found on the PBS IdeaLab blog, publiclaboratory.org, and others. He has presented his research with the Public Laboratory across the United States, Mexico, and Europe. Selected Publications Tanner, B.R., Kinner, D.A., Griffith, A.D., Young, R.S. & Sorrell, L.M (2011). Presence of Arundinaria gigantea (river cane) on numerous non-wetland sites suggests improper ecological classification of the species. Wetlands Ecology and Management. 19(6): 521-532. Coburn, A.S., Griffith, A.D. & Young, R.S. (2010). Inventory of coastal engineering projects in coastal national parks. Natural Resource Technical Report NPS/NRPC/GRD/NRTR???2010/373. National Park Service, Fort Collins, Colorado. Griffith, A.D., Kinner, D.A., Tanner, B.R., Moore, A., Mathews, K.G. & Young, R.S. (2009). Nutrient and physical soil characteristics of rivercane (Arundinaria gigantea) stands, western North Carolina. Castanea. 74(3): 224-235. updated Page: Classification
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dan.beavers commented on patcoyle's Note "Prototype juice bottle rig on R-10 UAir quad" on Jun Wednesday
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On Jun 4, Stewart Long updated Map: Montgomery Bell State Park. Burns, Tennessee
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On Jun 4, Stewart Long created a new Map: Montgomery Bell State Park
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On Jun 4, Stewart Long updated Map: Rotsoord. Utrecht, Netherlands.
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On Jun 4, Stewart Long created a new Map: Rotsoord. Utrecht, Netherlands.
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On Jun 4, Stewart Long updated Map: Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania.
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On Jun 4, Stewart Long created a new Map: Washington Crossing, Pennsylvania.


