GIS Exam 2
name 2 coarse resolution land sensors
AVHRR *since the 1970s) MODIS
Two main image types. pros and cons of both
Aerial:common relatively inexpensive easy to interpret small area coverage can be geometrically corrected Satellite images:large area coverage broader spectral range digital formats inexpensive for large areas geometrically accurate
Databases and tables in a GIS are generally organized in a multi-tiered structure to: ease data updates, manage simultaneous access, ease program modification, insulate users, all of the above
All of the Above
Where do we get digital data in the US?
Department of Agriculture (forest service, nat. resources conservation service), Department of Commerce (census bureau, natl oceanic and atmosphereic admn), Department of the Interior (US geologic service, natl park service, fish and wildlife service, bureau of land management), Independent Establishments and Government corporations (EPA)
Slivers in overlay are due to: features in one layer that are not present in another layer, differnt representations of the same boundary, resulting in gaps and overlaps, editing problems, none of the above
Different representations of the same boundary, resulting in gaps and overlaps
Aircraft tilt is the largest source of distortion by far for most aerial photographs. T or F
False
Terrain shaded surfaces do not depend on cell aspect. T or F
False
The National Landcover Datasets (NLCD) identify vegetation type to the plant species level. T or F
False
A dissolve function is used primarily to combine data in two different layers. t or f
False. It is used to combine features in the same layer
most satellite images are collected with film cameras, while most aerial images are taken with digital cameras. T or F
False. Terrain changes are
A friction surface that has an 1 unit travel cost for all cells is not the same thing as distance surface. T or F
False. it IS the same as a distance surface
Civilian satellites have trouble resolving features smaller than 3 meters (about 10 ft) across. T or F
False. they can see from 1 m to 50 cm
Name 3 high resolution sensing systems.
Ikonos, quickbird, spot
Ways to change amount of land covered when taking aerial photos
Increasing flying height reduces scale (objects get smaller, area covered by each photo increases) Increasing focal length increases scale (objects get larger, are covered decreases)
Name 3 Medium resolution sensing systems
Landsat Thematic Mapper (TM, ETM+) Multispectral Scanner (MSS) SPOT- coarse modes
Which of the following are NOT digital data available in a national program. National Hydrological Datasets (NHD), National Wetlands Inventory (NWI), National Infrastructure Datasets (NID), Census Data
National Infrastructure Datasets (NID)
A key is an item that allows you to uniquely identify a row in a table. T or F
True
A table in third normal form is by definition already in first and second normal form. T or F
True
Buffer functions produce data that are the same dimension or higher. T or F
True
If the moving window kernel is the same size over the entire raster data set, you will reduce the size of the output raster relative to the input raster every time you apply a moving window function. T or F
True
Map algebra often involves the combination of map layers through addition, subtraction, and other mathematical functions. T or F
True
Spatial scope is the extent of an operation, and may be categorized as local, neighborhood, or global. T or F
True
Tables must have key items with a common domain if they are to be joined. Tor F
True
The third order finite difference method uses information from more cells in a 3 x 3 kernel than the bi linear method for calculating slope. T or F
True
Viewsheds classify the world as visible or invisible from a location. T or F
True
items, variables, and attributes are synonyms. T or F
True
you can crate moving window functions for the mean, range, maximum, minimum, and majority functions. T or F
True
Note which are ture for contour lines. each show a given level of elevation, could also be called isolines, are usually at fixed intervals, may touch, all of the above, none of the above
all of the above
Which of the following are used to interpret aerial images? tone, texture, size, scale, brightness, all of the above, none of the above
all of the above
spatial data analysis
application of operations to coordinate and related attribute data. most often applied to solve a problem, identify high crime areas, generate a list of road segments that need repaving. typically involves using data from one or more layers to create output
Which of the following are FALSE for flow direction. flow direction is the direction water will flow from a cell, flow diretion is usually stored as an azimuth angle, flow direction is away from pits, flow direction is used to calculate watershed boundaries, none of the above, all of the above
flow direction is away from pits
Digital data aquisition is a three-step process. name them
identify obtain ingest
selection operations
identify features that meet one to several conditions or criteria
spatial operations or spatial functions
involve the manipulation or calculation of coordinates or attribute variables. can be applied sequentially to solve a problem. a chain is often specified with the output of each serving as the input of the next
remote sensing
measuring an abject from a distance. for is that means using photographic or satellite images to gather spatial data
A restrict operation has the effect on a table of: only reducing the number of rows, only reducing the number of columns, reducing the number of rows and columns, none of the above
only reducing the number of rows
what models of operations work best for raster vs vector
raster takes neighborhood operations best because consistent number of neighbors. In vector the neighbors polygons can be different sizes and cause changes in data. network operations are generally easier to apply in vector models
Normal forms are useful because they: improve the portability our database, increase access speeds, remove redundancies, all of the above
remove redundancies
binary classification
simplest form of classification. places objects into tow classes. a set of features is selected and assigned a value, and the complement of the set, all remaining features in the data layer, is assigned the different binary value.
classification
spatial data operation often used in conjunction with selection. also known as reclassification or recoding. it will categorize geographic objects based on a set of conditions. ex. 1 sq mile or larger = Large, 0.1 to 1 sq mile =Mid, 0.1 or less = Small. Often used at the end of a map making to show a map projection well for others to read easily.
containment
spatial selection operation that identifies all features that contain or surround a set of target features.
spatial scope
the extent or area of the input data that are used in determining the values at output locations. a way that spatial data operations may be characterized.
Slope is: the rise over the run, the run over rise, neither
the rise over the run
What is the domain of an item? the number of different values it takes in a table, the number of different values it can take in a table, the set of values it can take in a table, the number of ways it can be viewed in a table, none of the above
the set of values it cna take in a table
neighborhood operations
use data from both an input location plus nearby locations to etermine the output value. the extent and relative importance of values in the nearby region may vary, but the value at an output location is influenced by more than jut the value of data found at the corresponding input location
global operations
use data values from the entire input layer to determine each output value. the value at each location depends in part on the values at all input locations
Local operations
use only the data at one input location to determine the value at a corresponding output loctation. Attributes or values at adjacent location s are not used in the operation
set algebra
uses operations <,>,=,<>. they can be applied either alone or in combination to select features from a set
Fundamental variables
• Planimetric (x,y) location and dimensions • Topographic (z) location • Color (spectral reflectance) • Surface Temperature • Texture • Surface Roughness • Moisture Content • Vegetation Biomass
What are some of the common data sources?
•USGS Digital Raster Graphics (DRG) ((US geological survey)), universal transverse mercator projection • USGS Digital Line Graphs (DLG), usgs too, • NLCD - National Land Cover Datasets •USGS Digital Orthophoto Quadrangles (DOQ) • USFWS National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) • Digital Soil Data (National & State) • USGS Digital Elevation Models (DEMs) • USDOC Census/TIGER Files