Biophysical applications of satellite remote sensing

Author(s)

    • Hanes, Jonathan M.

Bibliographic Information

Biophysical applications of satellite remote sensing

edited by Jonathan M. Hanes

(Springer remote sensing/photogrammetry)

Springer, c2014

Available at  / 2 libraries

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Note

Includes bibliographical references

Description and Table of Contents

Description

A variety of biophysical applications (e.g. leaf area index and gross primary productivity) have been derived from measurements of the Earth system obtained remotely by NASA's MODIS sensors and other satellite platforms. In Biophysical Applications of Satellite Remote Sensing, the authors describe major applications of satellite remote sensing for studying Earth's biophysical phenomena. The focus of the book lies on the broad palette of specific applications (metrics) of biophysical activity derived using satellite remote sensing. With in-depth discussions of satellite-derived biophysical metrics that focus specifically on theory, methodology, validation, major findings, and directions of future research, this book provides an excellent resource for remote sensing specialists, ecologists, geographers, biologists, climatologists, and environmental scientists.

Table of Contents

  • 1. Indices of Vegetation Activity
  • 2. Green Leaf Area and Fraction of Photosynthetically Active Radiation Absorbed by Vegetation
  • - 3.Remote Sensing of Forest Biomass
  • - 4. Land Surface Phenology
  • - 5. Gross Primary Production of Terrestrial Vegetation
  • - 6. Assessing Net Ecosystem Exchange of Carbon Dioxide Between the Terrestrial Biosphere and the Atmosphere Using Fluxnet Observations and Remote Sensing
  • - 7 Oceanic Chlorophyll- a Content
  • - 8. Oceanic Net Primary Production.

by "Nielsen BookData"

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