Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery Archive

Google Earth now hosts high-resolution imagery that spans twenty percent of the Earth’s landmass and more than a third of the human population. This contemporary highresolution archive represents a significant, rapidly expanding, cost-free and largely unexploited resource for scientific inquiry...

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Main Author: David Potere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2008-12-01
Series:Sensors
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/8/12/7973/
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spelling doaj-59776093d6e4420885e77eda6236b19f2020-11-24T20:54:15ZengMDPI AGSensors1424-82202008-12-018127973798110.3390/s8127973Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery ArchiveDavid PotereGoogle Earth now hosts high-resolution imagery that spans twenty percent of the Earth’s landmass and more than a third of the human population. This contemporary highresolution archive represents a significant, rapidly expanding, cost-free and largely unexploited resource for scientific inquiry. To increase the scientific utility of this archive, we address horizontal positional accuracy (georegistration) by comparing Google Earth with Landsat GeoCover scenes over a global sample of 436 control points located in 109 cities worldwide. Landsat GeoCover is an orthorectified product with known absolute positional accuracy of less than 50 meters root-mean-squared error (RMSE). Relative to Landsat GeoCover, the 436 Google Earth control points have a positional accuracy of 39.7 meters RMSE (error magnitudes range from 0.4 to 171.6 meters). The control points derived from satellite imagery have an accuracy of 22.8 meters RMSE, which is significantly more accurate than the 48 control-points based on aerial photography (41.3 meters RMSE; t-test p-value < 0.01). The accuracy of control points in more-developed countries is 24.1 meters RMSE, which is significantly more accurate than the control points in developing countries (44.4 meters RMSE; t-test p-value < 0.01). These findings indicate that Google Earth highresolution imagery has a horizontal positional accuracy that is sufficient for assessing moderate-resolution remote sensing products across most of the world’s peri-urban areas.http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/8/12/7973/Optical remote sensinghigh-resolution imageryhorizontal positional accuracyland cover validationGoogle Earth
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author David Potere
spellingShingle David Potere
Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery Archive
Sensors
Optical remote sensing
high-resolution imagery
horizontal positional accuracy
land cover validation
Google Earth
author_facet David Potere
author_sort David Potere
title Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery Archive
title_short Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery Archive
title_full Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery Archive
title_fullStr Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery Archive
title_full_unstemmed Horizontal Positional Accuracy of Google Earth’s High-Resolution Imagery Archive
title_sort horizontal positional accuracy of google earthã¢â€â™s high-resolution imagery archive
publisher MDPI AG
series Sensors
issn 1424-8220
publishDate 2008-12-01
description Google Earth now hosts high-resolution imagery that spans twenty percent of the Earth’s landmass and more than a third of the human population. This contemporary highresolution archive represents a significant, rapidly expanding, cost-free and largely unexploited resource for scientific inquiry. To increase the scientific utility of this archive, we address horizontal positional accuracy (georegistration) by comparing Google Earth with Landsat GeoCover scenes over a global sample of 436 control points located in 109 cities worldwide. Landsat GeoCover is an orthorectified product with known absolute positional accuracy of less than 50 meters root-mean-squared error (RMSE). Relative to Landsat GeoCover, the 436 Google Earth control points have a positional accuracy of 39.7 meters RMSE (error magnitudes range from 0.4 to 171.6 meters). The control points derived from satellite imagery have an accuracy of 22.8 meters RMSE, which is significantly more accurate than the 48 control-points based on aerial photography (41.3 meters RMSE; t-test p-value < 0.01). The accuracy of control points in more-developed countries is 24.1 meters RMSE, which is significantly more accurate than the control points in developing countries (44.4 meters RMSE; t-test p-value < 0.01). These findings indicate that Google Earth highresolution imagery has a horizontal positional accuracy that is sufficient for assessing moderate-resolution remote sensing products across most of the world’s peri-urban areas.
topic Optical remote sensing
high-resolution imagery
horizontal positional accuracy
land cover validation
Google Earth
url http://www.mdpi.com/1424-8220/8/12/7973/
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