64_BIT -A 64-bit data type supporting decimals.32_BIT_FLOAT -A 32-bit data type supporting decimals.32_BIT_SIGNED -A 32-bit signed data type.32_BIT_UNSIGNED -A 32-bit unsigned data type.The values can range from -32,768 to 32,767. 16_BIT_SIGNED -A 16-bit signed data type.16_BIT_UNSIGNED -A 16-bit unsigned data type.The values supported can be from -128 to 127. 8_BIT_SIGNED -A signed 8-bit data type.The values supported can be from 0 to 255. 8_BIT_UNSIGNED -An unsigned 8-bit data type.The values supported can be from 0 to 15. Pixel type, the 8-bit default will be used and your output may be The bit depth, or radiometric resolution of Syntax MosaicToNewRaster_management (input_rasters, output_location, raster_dataset_name_with_extension, ) Parameter You can either clip the input rasters prior to using this tool, or clip the output of this tool. If you want a specific extent for your output raster, consider using the Clip tool. This tool does not honor the Output extent environment setting for enterprise geodatabases. If an improper colormap mode is chosen, your output might not turn out as you expected. Arctoolbox- spatial analyst- right click on 'extract. Additional items are added to the output rasters attribute tableone for each input raster. The original cell values from each of the inputs is recorded in the attribute table of the output raster. In this situation, use the Mosaic tool for raster with different color maps however, you must choose the proper Mosaic Colormap Mode operator. Hope this is relevant to what you asked here, The steps I do to clip multiple rasters with same polygon shapefile/ raster in my ArcGIS 10 : 1. The Combine tool takes multiple input rasters and assigns a new value for each unique combination of input values in the output raster.
When mosaicking with raster datasets containing color maps, it is important to note differences across the color maps for each raster dataset you choose to mosaic. The GIF format only supports single-band raster datasets. When storing your raster dataset to a JPEG file, a JPEG 2000 file, or a geodatabase, you can specify a Compression Type type and Compression Quality within the Environment Settings. You can save your output to BIL, BIP, BMP, BSQ, DAT, Esri Grid, GIF, IMG, JPEG, JPEG 2000, PNG, TIFF, or any geodatabase raster dataset. If you do not set the pixel type, the 8-bit default will be used and your output may be incorrect. You must set the pixel type to match your existing input raster datasets. The Mosaic tool has more parameters available when combining datasets into an existing raster, such as options to ignore background and nodata values. When working with a large number of raster datasets, the Raster Catalog To Raster Dataset tool performs more efficiently.
The inputs must have the same number of bands and same bit depth otherwise, the tool will exit with an error message. The input raster datasets are all the raster datasets you would like to mosaic together. Merges multiple raster datasets into a new raster dataset.