Buch, Englisch, 2304 Seiten, Format (B × H): 225 mm x 289 mm, Gewicht: 7200 g
Reihe: Remote Sensing Handbook
Buch, Englisch, 2304 Seiten, Format (B × H): 225 mm x 289 mm, Gewicht: 7200 g
Reihe: Remote Sensing Handbook
ISBN: 978-1-4822-1801-5
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd (Sales)
In true handbook style, this volume demonstrates in-depth, extensive and comprehensive coverage of Remote Sensing of Water Resources, Disasters, and Urban Studies. The book provides fundamental as well as practical knowledge of remote sensing of myriad topics pertaining to water resources, disasters, and urban areas such as hydrology, water resources, water use, water productivity, floods, wetlands, snow and ice, nightlights, geomorphology, droughts and drylands, disasters, volcanoes, fire, and smart cities.
Highlights include:
- Hydrological studies, groundwater studies, flood studies, and crop water use and water productivity studies
- Wetland modeling, mapping, and characterization
- Snow and ice studies
- Drought and dryland monitoring and mapping methods
- Volcanoes, coal fires, and greenhouse gas emissions
- Urban remote sensing for disaster risk management
- Remote sensing for the design of smart cities
Considered magnum opus on the subject the three-volume Remote Sensing Handbook is edited by Dr. Prasad S. Thenkabail, an internationally acclaimed scientist in remote sensing, GIScience, and spatial sciences. The volume has contributions from pioneering remote sensing global experts on specific topics. The volume gives you a knowledge base on each of the above mentioned topics, a deep understanding the evolution remote sensing science, and familiarity with state-of-the-art of technology as well as a future vision for the field.
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
Foreword, Editor, Contributors, Section I:?Hydrology and Water Resources, 1. Remote Sensing Technologies for Multiscale Hydrological Studies: Advances and Perspectives, 2. Groundwater Targeting Using Remote Sensing, Section II:?Water Use and Water Productivity, 3. Remote Sensing of Actual Evapotranspiration from Croplands, 4. Water Productivity Studies from Earth Observation Data: Characterization, Modeling, and Mapping Water Use and Water Productivity, Section III:?Floods, 5. Flood Monitoring Using the Integration of Remote Sensing and Complementary Techniques, 6. Flood Studies Using Synthetic Aperture Radar Data, Section IV: Wetlands, 7. Remote Sensing of Mangrove Wetlands, 8. Wetland Mapping Methods and Techniques Using Multisensor, Multiresolution Remote Sensing: Successes and Challenges, 9. Inland Valley Wetland Cultivation and Preservation for Africa’s Green and Blue Revolution Using Multisensor Remote Sensing, Section V: Snow and Ice, 10. Remote Sensing Mapping and Modeling of Snow Cover Parameters and Applications, Section VI:?Nightlights, 11. Nighttime Light Remote Sensing: Monitoring Human Societies from Outer Space, Section VII:?Geomorphology, 12. Geomorphological Studies from Remote Sensing, Section VIII:?Droughts and Drylands, 13. Agricultural Drought Detection and Monitoring Using Vegetation Health Methods, 14. Agricultural Drought Monitoring Using Space-Derived Vegetation and Biophysical Products: A Global Perspective, 15. Remote Sensing of Drought: Emergence of a Satellite-Based Monitoring Toolkit for the United States, 16. Regional Drought Monitoring Based on Multisensor Remote Sensing, 17. Land Degradation Assessment and Monitoring of Drylands, Section IX: Disasters, 18. Disasters: Risk Assessment, Management, and Post-Disaster Studies Using Remote Sensing, 19. Humanitarian Emergencies: Causes, Traits, and Impacts as Observed by Remote Sensing, Section X: Volcanoes, 20. Remote Sensing of Volcanoes, Section XI:?Fires, 21. Satellite-Derived Nitrogen Dioxide Variations from Biomass Burning in a Subtropical Evergreen Forest, Northeast India, 22. Remote Sensing–Based Mapping and Monitoring of Coal Fires, Section XII:?Urban Areas, 23. Urban Growth Mapping of Mega Cities: Multisensor Approach, 24. Latest High-Resolution Remote Sensing and Visibility Analysis for Smart Environment Design, Section XIII:?Summary, 25. Remote Sensing of Water Resources, Disasters, and Urban Areas: Monitoring, Modeling, and Mapping Advances over the Last 50 Years and a Vision for the Future