CVMay 20

A Non-Reference Diffusion-Based Restoration Framework for Landsat 7 ETM+ SLC-off Imagery in Antarctica

arXiv:2605.213717.1
AI Analysis

This work addresses the challenge of restoring Landsat 7 SLC-off imagery in rapidly changing Antarctic environments, providing a useful tool for exploiting historical satellite data for Antarctic studies.

The authors propose DiffGF, a non-reference diffusion-based framework to restore missing pixels in Landsat 7 ETM+ SLC-off imagery in Antarctica, achieving high-fidelity restoration without external reference data. The method is validated on a dedicated dataset and shows practical value in downstream crevasse segmentation.

Acquiring usable optical imagery in Antarctica is inherently challenging due to prolonged polar nights and frequent cloud cover. Landsat provides the longest and most continuous optical observations and constitutes one of the most important remote sensing data sources for Antarctic studies. However, the scan-line corrector (SLC) failure in 2003 resulted in approximately 22% missing pixels in Landsat 7 ETM+ SLC-off imagery, severely limiting its usability. Unlike many non-polar environments, Antarctic surfaces undergo rapid and substantial changes, which makes it difficult to obtain reliable reference imagery and reduces the applicability of conventional reference-based gap-filling methods. To address this challenge, we propose DiffGF, a non-reference diffusion-based framework for restoring Landsat 7 SLC-off imagery without requiring any external reference data. DiffGF adopts a two-stage design consisting of a latent-space diffusion process and a pixel-space refinement. A dedicated Antarctic dataset, SLCANT, is constructed for training and evaluation. Quantitative and qualitative results demonstrate that DiffGF restores Antarctic SLC-off imagery with high fidelity. Its practical value is further examined through a downstream crevasse segmentation application. The results suggest that DiffGF provides a useful approach for exploiting Landsat 7 SLC-off archives in Antarctica, enabling the extraction of valuable information from historical records and supporting related Antarctic studies.

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