Abstract

In this paper, we propose a lossless compression algorithm for hyperspectral images inspired by the distributed-source-coding (DSC) principle. DSC refers to separate compression and joint decoding of correlated sources, which are taken as adjacent bands of a hyperspectral image. This concept is used to design a compression scheme that provides error resilience, very low complexity, and good compression performance. These features are obtained employing scalar coset codes to encode the current band at a rate that depends on its correlation with the previous band, without encoding the prediction error. Iterative decoding employs the decoded version of the previous band as side information and uses a cyclic redundancy code to verify correct reconstruction. We develop three algorithms based on this paradigm, which provide different tradeoffs between compression performance, error resilience, and complexity. Their performance is evaluated on raw and calibrated AVIRIS images and compared with several existing algorithms. Preliminary results of a field-programmable gate array implementation are also provided, which show that the proposed algorithms can sustain an extremely high throughput.

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