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NV5 Geospatial Blog

Each month, NV5 Geospatial posts new blog content across a variety of categories. Browse our latest posts below to learn about important geospatial information or use the search bar to find a specific topic or author. Stay informed of the latest blog posts, events, and technologies by joining our email list!



New ENVI Agent, IDL Agent, and GeoAgent Quick Guides

New ENVI Agent, IDL Agent, and GeoAgent Quick Guides

6/9/2026

The recent release of ENVI® Agent, IDL® Agent, and GeoAgent™ revolutionize how users interact with geospatial software. These agentic AI applications act as partners to plan, simplify, and execute complex workflows. Knowing where to start can be challenging for new users. To this end, we developed three new quick guides to... Read More >

Introducing NISAR Data Support

Introducing NISAR Data Support

6/5/2026

The release of ENVI® SARscape 6.3 in April 2026 includes preliminary support for NASA-ISRO SAR (NISAR) data. The NISAR mission is a joint Earth-observing satellite project between NASA and the Indian Space Research Organization designed to monitor changes in the planet’s land and ice surfaces using advanced radar imaging. It... Read More >

Monitoring Illegal Mining in the Amazon: Turning Persistent Data Into Actionable Insight

Monitoring Illegal Mining in the Amazon: Turning Persistent Data Into Actionable Insight

5/28/2026

Illegal mining over decades has constituted one of the most persistent and complex socio-environmental problems in the Brazilian Amazon. In recent years, with the increasingly intensive use of mechanized extraction, the associated environmental impacts—such as deforestation, intense soil disturbance, river siltation, and mercury... Read More >

From Answers to Action: Why ENVI and IDL Agents Go Beyond General AI

From Answers to Action: Why ENVI and IDL Agents Go Beyond General AI

4/20/2026

As generative AI tools like Claude and Gemini continue to gain traction, many organizations are asking the same question: Can general purpose AI actually support real geospatial workflows, or does it stop at surface-level answers? That question was front and center in our recent webinar, Meet Your New Partners in Science: ENVI... Read More >

Mapping Earthquake Deformation in Taiwan With ENVI

Mapping Earthquake Deformation in Taiwan With ENVI

12/15/2025

Unlocking Critical Insights With ENVI® Tools Taiwan sits at the junction of major tectonic plates and regularly experiences powerful earthquakes. Understanding how the ground moves during these events is essential for disaster preparedness, public safety, and building community resilience. But traditional approaches like field... Read More >

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2012 ENVI User Group: COSI-Corr User Presentations

Anonym

At the 2012 ENVI User Group, Sebastien Leprince, California Institute of Technology, will be presenting “COSI-Corr: Principles of Sub-Pixel Correlation” and Francois Ayoub, California Institute of Technology, will be presenting “COSI-Corr: Application of Sub-pixel Correlation for Change Detection”.

An orthorectified image, or orthophoto, is one where each pixel represents a true ground location and all geometric, terrain, and sensor distortions have been removed to within a specified accuracy. Orthorectification transforms the central perspective of an aerial photograph or satellite-derived image to an orthogonal view of the ground, which removes the effects of sensor tilt and terrain relief. As a result, scale is constant throughout the orthophoto, regardless of elevation, thus providing accurate measurements of distance and direction.  The need for this type of corrected image is very important to geospatial professionals, who need to combine orthophotos with other spatial data in a GIS for city planning, natural disaster rescue efforts, and other tasks.

COSI-Corr is a plug-in for ENVI and is freely available from the California Institute of Technology’s Tectonics Observatory.  COSI-Corr provides tools to accurately orthorectify, co-register, and correlate optical remotely sensed images to retrieve ground surface deformation from multi-temporal images.  It can also be a valuable tool for many other change detection applications requiring accurate co-registration of images, such as measuring glacier flows or landslides.

Using accurate digital elevation models with global coverage, such as SRTM, users can achieve subpixel change detection measurements using the COSI-Corr methodology in ENVI.  With COSI-Corr, it is possible to measure local displacements between images, even when those images are from different instruments and/or at different resolutions.

The methodology used by COSI-Corr corrects pointing inaccuracies in push-broom satellites and aerial images for accurate subpixel image coregistration.  This accuracy also allows for the displacement field between multitemporal images to be estimated accurately.  With COSI-Corr, users are able to investigate a variety of geomorphic and seismotectonic processes.

You can learn more about the work of Sebastien Leprince, Froancois Ayoub, and about COSI-Corr by visiting: http://www.tectonics.caltech.edu/slip_history/spot_coseis/ and http://www.imaginlabs.com/.

What application of COSI-Corr do you think is the most valuable to remote sensing science?

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