_The Infragram Kickstarter video, a great introduction to the project._ ###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 take these kinds of photos**, enabling us to monitor our environment through quantifiable data. Our technique uses a modified digital camera to capture near-infrared and blue light in the same image, but in different color channels. We then [post-process the image](#How+to+process+your+images:) (using [Infragram.org](http://infragram.org)) to attempt to infer how much it is photosynthesizing. This allows us to better understand and quantify how much of the available light plants are metabolizing into sugar via photosynthesis. > You can do this yourself (as with all Public Lab tools) but there is also an [Infragram DIY Filter Pack](http://store.publiclab.org/products/infragram-diy-filter-pack) available in the Public Lab Store. We [ran a Kickstarter](http://kickstarter.com/projects/publiclab/infragram-the-infrared-photography-project/) for a version of this camera we call the **Infragram**. [Read more about it here »](/wiki/infragram) Here's the video from the Kickstarter, which offers a nice visual explanation of the technique: ###What is it good for? Multispectral or infrared/visible photography has seen a variety of applications in the decades [since it was developed](#Background:+satellite+infrared+imaging). We have focused on the following uses: - 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) Notable uses include [this photograph of an unidentified plume of material in the Gowanus Canal](/notes/liz/8-3-2011/infrared-balloon-image-reveals-gowanus-plume) (and [writeup by TechPresident](http://techpresident.com/blog-entry/how-diy-science-solving-ecological-mysteries-new-york-city)) and a variety of projects at a small farm in New Hampshire [at the annual iFarm event](/tag/ifarm). The [Louisiana Universities Marine Consortium](http://lumcon.edu) has also [collaborated with Public Lab contributors to measure wetlands loss](/notes/shannon/5-29-2011/plots-and-lumcon-collaboration) following the Deepwater Horizon oil disaster. **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). This picture was taken from a commercial airplane flight: [![infragram](https://i.publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/000/424/medium/aerial-split.jpg)](https://i.publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/000/424/original/aerial-split.jpg) ###How does it work? **Camera modification:** We've worked on several different techniques, from [dual camera systems](/wiki/dual-camera-kit-guide) to the current, single-camera technique. This involves removing the infrared-blocking filter from [almost any digital camera](/tag/infragram-conversion), and adding a [specific blue filter](/wiki/infragram#Filters). ![swap.png](https://i.publiclab.org/system/images/photos/000/000/376/medium/swap.png) This filters out the red light, and **measures infrared light in its place** using a piece of carefully chosen "NGB" or "infrablue" filter. Read more about [the development of this technique here](http://publiclab.org/notes/cfastie/04-20-2013/superblue). You can also learn more about how digital camera image sensors detect colors [at this great tutorial by Bigshot](http://www.bigshotcamera.com/learn/image-sensor/index). **Post-processing:** Once you take a multispectral photograph with a modified camera, you must [post-process it](#How+to+process+your+images:), compositing the infrared and visible data to generate a new image which (if it works) displays healthy, photosynthetically active areas as bright regions. An in-depth article on the technique by Chris Fastie (albeit using red instead of blue for visible light) [can be found here](/wiki/ndvi-plots-ir-camera-kit). **History of the project:** While we used to use a two-camera system, [research by Chris Fastie](/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 Infrablue 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 most webcams or cheap point-and-shoots into an infrared/visible camera. ###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](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. ![ndvi-vis-comparison.jpg](/system/images/photos/000/001/289/medium/ndvi-vis-comparison.jpg) 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](https://plus.google.com/photos/116103622078305917397/albums/5878196749239180465/5878198341400814034) **** ## Frequently Asked Questions Ask a question about infrared imaging [notes:question:infragram] **** ## How to process your images (this section is moved to and updated at http://publiclab.org/wiki/near-infrared-imaging) We're working on an easy process to generate composite, infrared + visible images that will reveal new details of plant health and photosynthesis. There are several approaches: * The **easiest way** is to process your images online at the free, open source [Infragram.org](http://infragram.org) * [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) * 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) **Note:** Older versions of this page have been kept at the following wiki page: http://publiclab.org/wiki/near-infrared-camera-history...
Author | Comment | Last activity | Moderation | ||
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cfastie | "Oh, that's what's happening. I wondered how it worked at all in Chrome without Silverlight support. In all other browsers you see overlays of zooma..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
peauproductions | "Hello Ned, can you please contact me: nolan@peauproductions.com. We have a new dual-band NDVI filter and would like to ask you some questions, tha..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
warren | "Cool, the Photosynth viewer for Chrome is done in HTML5, natively - no plugin! Pretty neat. " | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
cfastie | "The angle from which the photo is taken and the angle of the sun do influence the NDVI result. NDVI values are a function of how much red and NIR l..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
cfastie | "Stretching the histograms of either the NIR or VIS (or both) channels used to make NDVI is a trick that can produce more meaningful NDVI. I don't k..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
kykytos | "Is it important the station in which the photo is taken? I mean, how do you differ infrared reflected radiation from infrared emitted radiation (th..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
kykytos | "@cfastie What do you mean with 'stretching the histogram of the infrablue photo'? Because if it means to reduce blue levels (increase NDVI levels),..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
khufkens | "Good point, I might use this approach to see if I can get better results on my PRI sensor. Things were funky and this offset in response (differenc..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
cfastie | "Or without knowing the spectral response of the sensor, you can brute force the response of a dual-camera system by shooting through narrow band pa..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
khufkens | "This is again a reason why you would want to know the spectral response of most imaging sensors. Without this information it will require field val..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
cfastie | "White balance is important for most single-camera NDVI systems, but could be irrelevant to dual-camera systems. The goal is to capture photos with ..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
mathew | "wow! aerial robotic planting! that's really cool. " | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
clayton | "Wouldn't you still need a spectrometer with you to calibrate the panel every time you go out into the field to account for varying lighting conditi..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
Tbtouaki | "Hi I have tried several white balance options before, base on what I've read. On this pics the settings were exactly the same as the maxmax camera...." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
Tbtouaki | "Hi Sorry for the trouble but how did you proceed to calibrate individual bands to reflectance before calculating NDVI? Did you use "dark object sub..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
cfastie | "Hi Rita, Your photo above (NIR1_Red3_b.jpg) will not produce very good NDVI. Most of the pixels of plants have the same value in each of the three ..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
Tbtouaki | "Hi I currently have a modified canon (IR block removed) with a wratten 25A Red filter. My pictures are really nice looking but I have big problems ..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
Jimo1966 | "Yes! Glue can be remove easily with Heat Gun and a Sewing Needle. Smash to bits is never an option. (or the last one) I filed down I tiny screwdriv..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
funkycbj | "I just used a StellarNet spectrometer to find the transmittance of hot filters from the Canon A2200 & A2500. Both hot filters rapidly fall off ..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
warren | "Hi, JBJ -- whoa, very late reply, but you should check out this version: http://publiclab.org/notes/cfastie/7-12-2012/shutter-timer-upgrade And th..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
warren | "I am so sad in retrospect that I did not enter this competition, Chris. " | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
woodcmiami | "Should the script be named ~/etc/init.d/timelapse.sh instead of ~/etc/init.d/timelapse.ch like you have in the second code window? " | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
bwarzak | "Ned, Our company is supposed to be writing an article for Vision System Design magazine regarding uses for dual band filters. I realize that the r..." | Read more » | over 9 years ago | |||
Thorsten | "I had no problems with using lens filters so far. But it would be interesting if there is some reason to better replace the IR Filter instead. " | Read more » | almost 10 years ago |