An Innovative New Approach to Light Pollution Measurement by Drone
Drones, ISSN: 2504-446X, Vol: 8, Issue: 9
2024
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Most Recent Blog
Drones, Vol. 8, Pages 504: An Innovative New Approach to Light Pollution Measurement by Drone
Drones, Vol. 8, Pages 504: An Innovative New Approach to Light Pollution Measurement by Drone Drones doi: 10.3390/drones8090504 Authors: Katarzyna Bobkowska Pawel Burdziakowski Pawel Tysiac
Most Recent News
Study Results from Gdansk University of Technology in the Area of Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Published (An Innovative New Approach to Light Pollution Measurement by Drone)
2024 OCT 08 (NewsRx) -- By a News Reporter-Staff News Editor at Defense & Aerospace Daily -- Investigators publish new report on unmanned aerial vehicle.
Article Description
The study of light pollution is a relatively new and specific field of measurement. The current literature is dominated by articles that describe the use of ground and satellite data as a source of information on light pollution. However, there is a need to study the phenomenon on a microscale, i.e., locally within small locations such as housing estates, parks, buildings, or even inside buildings. Therefore, there is an important need to measure light pollution at a lower level, at the low level of the skyline. In this paper, the authors present a new drone design for light pollution measurement. A completely new original design for an unmanned platform for light pollution measurement is presented, which is adapted to mount custom sensors (not originally designed to be mounted on a unmanned aerial vehicles) allowing registration in the nadir and zenith directions. The application and use of traditional photometric sensors in the new configuration, such as the spectrometer and the sky quality meter (SQM), is presented. A multispectral camera for nighttime measurements, a calibrated visible-light camera, is used. The results of the unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) are generated products that allow the visualisation of multimodal photometric data together with the presence of a geographic coordinate system. This paper also presents the results from field experiments during which the light spectrum is measured with the installed sensors. As the results show, measurements at night, especially with multispectral cameras, allow the assessment of the spectrum emitted by street lamps, while the measurement of the sky quality depends on the flight height only up to a 10 m above ground level.
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