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| This
information is an excerpt from Remote
Sensing Tutorial website with the consent of the
owner Nicholas M.Short and NASA. |
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A
Remote Sensing Tutorial
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Many
different Earth-sensing satellites, with diverse sensors
mounted on sophisticated platforms, are in Earth orbit
or soon to be launched. These sensors are designed
to cover a wide range of the electromagnetic spectrum
and are generating enormous amounts of data that must
be processed, stored, and made available to the user
community.
This rich source of unique, repetitive, global coverage
produces valuable data and information for applications
as diverse as forest fire monitoring and grassland
inventory in Mongolia, early typhoon warning over
the vast Pacific Ocean, flood assessment in coastal
zones around the Bay of Bengal, and crop health and
growth within the plains of the United States. Additionally,
the commercial realm is also developing and launching
various high resolution satellites and marketing these
data worldwide.
Dr.
Nicholas Short, a former NASA Goddard employee in
the Applied Information Sciences Branch, NASA Goddard
Space Flight Center, has prepared a highly intuitive,
easily accessible remote sensing tutorial for new
users of remote sensing and for the educational community.
This tutorial will provide a detailed understanding
of the utility of remote sensing data in light of
the fundamental principles of electromagnetic energy,
especially as they relate to sensor design and function.
Dr.Short is the author of several NASA-sponsored books
(Mission to Earth: Landsat Views the World; The Landsat
Tutorial Workbook; The HCMM Anthology; and Geomorphology
from Space) germane to the subject of remote sensing.
The
Online Journal of Space Communication wishes to thank
Nicholas M. Short, Sr (nmshort@epix.net) and William
J. Campbell, Head of the Applied Information Sciences
Branch, NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt,
Maryland 20771 for making this useful tutorial available
to journal users. Also thanks to webmaster: Bill Dickinson
Jr., (rstweb@gst.com) and site curator: Nannette Fekete. |
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The
Concept of Remote Sensing |
| If
you have heard the term "remote sensing"
before you may have asked, "what does it mean?"
It's a rather simple, familiar activity that we all
do as a matter of daily life, but that gets complicated
when we increase the scale. As you view the screen
of your computer monitor, you are actively engaged
in remote sensing. |
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A
physical quantity (light) emanates from that screen,
which is a source of radiation. The radiated light
passes over a distance, and thus is "remote"
to some extent, until it encounters and is captured
by a sensor (your eyes). Each eye sends a signal
to a processor (your brain) which records the
data and interprets this into information.
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| Several
of the human senses gather their awareness of the
external world almost entirely by perceiving a variety
of signals, either emitted or reflected, actively
or passively, from objects that transmit this information
in waves or pulses. Thus, one hears disturbances in
the atmosphere carried as sound waves, experiences
sensations such as heat (either through direct contact
or as radiant energy), reacts to chemical signals
from food through taste and smell, is cognizant of
certain material properties such as roughness through
touch, and recognizes shapes, colors, and relative
positions of exterior objects and classes of materials
by means of seeing visible light issuing from them.
In the previous sentence, all sensations that are
not received through direct contact are remotely sensed.
I-1
In the illustration above, the
man is using his personal visual remote sensing device
to view the scene before him. Do you know how the
human eye acts to form images? If not, check the answer.
ANSWER
However, in practice we do not usually think of our
bodily senses as remote sensors in the way we use
the term technically. A formal and comprehensive definition
of applied remote sensing *, as it is customarily
formulated to include determination of geophysical
parameters, is:
The
acquisition and measurement of data/information on
some property(ies) of a phenomenon, object, or material
by a recording device not in physical, intimate contact
with the feature(s) under surveillance; techniques
involve amassing knowledge pertinent to environments
by measuring force fields, electromagnetic radiation,
or acoustic energy employing cameras, radiometers
and scanners, lasers, radio frequency receivers, radar
systems, sonar, thermal devices, seismographs, magnetometers,
gravimeters, scintillometers, and other instruments.

*
The term "remote sensing" is itself a relatively
new addition to the technical lexicon. It was coined
by Ms Evelyn Pruitt in the mid-1950's when she, a
geographer/oceanographer, was with the U.S. Office
of Naval Research (ONR) outside Washington, D.C..
No specific publication or professional meeting is
cited in literature consulted by the writer (NMS)
in which the words "remote sensing" were
stated. Those "in the know" claim that it
was used openly by the time of several ONR-sponsored
symposia in the late '50s at the University of Michigan.
The writer believes he first heard this term at a
Short Course on Photogeology coordinated by Dr. Robert
Reeves at the Annual Meeting of the Geological Society
of America in 1958. As defined above, the term generally
implies that the sensor is placed at some considerable
distance from the sensed target, in contrast to close-in
measurements made by "proximate sensing."
(sometimes given as "in situ" sensing),
which can apply to some of the set-ups used in medical
remote sensing. It seems to have been coined by Ms
Pruitt to take into account the new views from space
obtained by the early meteorological satellites which
were obviously more "remote" from their
targets than the airplanes that up until then provided
mainly aerial photos as the medium for recording images
of the Earth's surface.
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Pages
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Issue
No 3
Winter
2003
Remote
Sensing of Earth via Satellite |
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