A new Plant Facility in Wageningen

Wednesday 7 September 2011
Time: 14:00 – 17:00
Wageningen Campus
Location: GAIA building
Droevendaalsesteeg 3 (Building 101)
Room Gaia 1


Participation is free of charge.
For registration, please send an email to Antoinette.Stoffers@wur.nl.
We are looking forward for your participation!

Recently, a laboratory measurement facility has been realized for assessing the anisotropic reflectance and emittance behaviour of soils, leaves and small canopies under controlled illumination conditions. These measurements can be used, e.g., to assess the plant pigment (chlorophyll, xanthophyll, etc.) and non-pigment system (water, cellulose, lignin, nitrogen, etc.).

The facility consists of an ASD FieldSpec spectroradiometer covering the spectral range from 350 – 2500 nm at 1 nm spectral sampling interval. The thermal emittance is measured using a NEC TH9100 Infrared Thermal Imager. It operates in a single band covering the spectral range from 8 – 14 mm with a resolution of 0.02 K. A 1000 W Quartz Tungsten Halogen lamp is used as illumination source, approximating the radiance distribution of the sun. In the near future a pulsed LED illumination system will be added in order to perform measurements on induced chlorophyll fluorescence of photosystem PSII.

Multi-angular measurements are achieved by using a robotic positioning system allowing to perform either reflectance or emittance measurements over almost a complete hemisphere. The hemisphere can be sampled continuously between 0° and 80° from nadir and up to a few degrees from the hot-spot configuration. The goal is to infer the BRDF (bidirectional reflectance distribution function) and BTDF (bidirectional thermal distribution function) from these multi-angular measurements for various surface types (like soils, agricultural crops, small tree canopies and artificial objects) and surface roughness. The steering of the robotic arm and the reading of the spectroradiometer and the thermal camera are all fully automated.

Programme:

Time Subject Name
14:00 Introduction to the workshop Dr. J. Clevers
14:05 “A remote sensing perspective on observing plant functional traits using reflectance anisotropy” Dr. J. Clevers
14:40 “Modelling spectral and directional observations of vegetation canopies: reflection, emission and fluorescence” Prof. Dr. W. Verhoef
15:20 “A biologist’s perspective of leaf absorbance and fluorescence” Dr. J. Harbinson
16:00 Demonstrations in small groups and drinks

Demonstrations:
1) Plant Facility
2) XY Phenotyping system
3) Terrestrial Laser system


 

  
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Contact
Jan Clevers
jan.clevers@wur.nl
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