Titre de série : |
Remote sensing of Earth resources : Technical papers selected from the conference on Earth resources observation and information analysis system held in Tullahoma, Tennessee, March 13-14, 1972, 1 |
Titre : |
Volume 1 |
Type de document : |
Actes de congrès |
Auteurs : |
F. Shahrokhi, Editeur scientifique |
Congrès : |
Congrès: conference on Earth resources observation and information analysis system Remote sensing of Earth resources (13 - 14 mars 1972; Tullahoma, Tennessee - Etats-Unis), Auteur |
Editeur : |
Tullahoma : The University of Tennessee Space Institute |
Année de publication : |
1972 |
Importance : |
783 p. |
Format : |
15 x 23 cm |
Note générale : |
Bibliographie |
Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
Descripteur : |
[Vedettes matières IGN] Applications de télédétection [Termes descripteurs IGN] analyse de données [Termes descripteurs IGN] capteur (télédétection) [Termes descripteurs IGN] classification spectrale [Termes descripteurs IGN] couleur (variable spectrale) [Termes descripteurs IGN] image ERTS [Termes descripteurs IGN] image multibande [Termes descripteurs IGN] photographie aérienne [Termes descripteurs IGN] photographie spatiale [Termes descripteurs IGN] rayonnement électromagnétique [Termes descripteurs IGN] rayonnement infrarouge [Termes descripteurs IGN] ressources terrestres [Termes descripteurs IGN] signature spectrale
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Résumé : |
(Auteur) Food, water, air, clothing, and shelter are basic needs of man. Tools have been devised through the centuries to allow man to provide himself with his basic needs, and to allow time to develop himself in those capacities which are beyond the basic needs. When man's resources seemed unlimited, he could afford to embellish his basic-need-satisfying goods, and to proliferate other tangible goods designed to express his capacities. The time for reexamination of his use of material goods is brought forcibly to him by his increased awareness of himself in a matter-limited world. Perhaps man's own search for better ways to acquire and handle material led to his awareness of the consequences and limitations of that pursuit. In any event, he has developed a conscious need for cooperative management of his resources; a need which fits very well within his basic gregarious industrial and agricultural activities. It may be that in the course of accepting his limitations and in forming the cooperative institutions which will embody and execute his decisions, man will discover the joys and rewards that enable him to form a viable society founded on a new view of the place of matter embellishment in his collective value-system. Toward the furthering of the cooperative process, the University of Tennessee Space Institute is dedicated to work, by classroom and field work and by experience and thought-sharing conferences such as the one recorded in this text. All who were involved in planning and carrying out this meeting wish to take this opportunity to express deepest thanks to all those participating, certainly for their valuable contributions of a technical nature, as well as for the openness and warmth of their companionship.
The Southeast region of the United States has had an opportunity to observe, in the course of the Tennessee Valley Authority's lifetime, demonstrations of how, in fact, man may proceed to order his environment to suit his purposes. Although questions of a political and philosophical nature still exist concerning TVA activities, the basic capability of man to accomplish such an environmental ordering has been established in the regional consciousness. This awareness lent a particular sense of confidence to those preparing the conference reported herein, as well as an understanding that a certain broadness of outlook was desirable. There are herein many papers of an eminently practical nature, dealing with the purely technological aspects of getting a remote sensing job done. The papers on legal aspects of remote sensing activity and the governmental use of it, however, brought a proper balance to the conference. Cost factors were never neglected, and were brought clearly into consideration in those fields, such as forestry, where they are of overriding importance in the resource management decision making process.
The conference arose out of the growing national awareness of the need to manage our resources, and to budget them, in responsible consideration of present and future citizens of our limited world. The purpose was to examine the need for environmental observation, to share technical developments which satisfy that need, and to discuss the concomitant data handling requirements. The emphasis was on existing sensor technology; however, other vital factors such as user requirements, costs, and social and political influences were included, in order to provide an overview of the current technological activity within the total cultural life. Specific accomplishments and personal or corporate experiences were chosen to be a convincing vehicle for conveying information about the current state of remote sensing activity, rounded out and supported by more theoretical discussions from the underlying sciences, such as biology, physics, and mathematics.
It is the hope of the University of Tennessee Space Institute that this volume will be of value to all who are engaged in resource management activity. If it is well received and found useful, then the Space Institute will have served its founding purpose well. |
Note de contenu : |
Considerations and Techniques for Incorporating Remotely Sensed Imagery into the Land Resource Management Process
Effects of Leaf Age for Four Growth Stages of Cotton and Corn Plants on Leaf Reflectance, Structure, Thickness, Water and Chlorophyll Concentrations and Selection of Wavelengths for Crop Discrimination
A Critique of Remote Sensing Evaluation Techniques
Basic Principles of Earth Resource Sensors
The Utilization of Remotely Sensed Information in Formulating Public Policy: Lessons Learned in Situ
Remote Sensing Techniques in Evaluating Earth Resources : a Study of Potential Uses of Remote Sensing for Southeastern U.S.
Remote Sensing Applications in Urban and Regional Planning in the Los Angeles Metropolis: Problems and Accomplishments
Synthetic Aperture Slar Systemsand Their Application for Regional Resources Analysis
An Overview of Remote Sensing for Wetlands Investigations
Remote Sensing of the Appalachian Wildland Resources
High Altitude Aerial Photography as an Information Source for Urban Landscape Analysis
The Potential Application of Sapce Technology to the Radio Tracking and Biotelemetry of Unrestrained Animals
Space Imagery for the Environmental Mapping
An Application of a Space Technique for Pollution Detection
Investigation of Color Detail, Color Analysis and False-Color Representation in Satellite Photographs
Social, Economic and Political Factors Associated with Earth Resources Observation and Information Analysis
Legal Aspects of Water Pollution Detection Through Remote Sensing
The Cost-Effectiveness of High Altitude Systems for Regional Resource Assessment
To the Problem of Influence of Shapes and Sizes of the Radiating Objects on Infrared Aerial Survey
Diffusion Coefficients and Current Velocities in Coastal Waters by Remote Sensing Techniques
The Brightness Temperature of the Air-Sea Interface at Microwave Frequencies
A Comparison of two Approaches for Category Identification and Classification Analysis from an Agricultural Scene
On the Question of Automatic Analysis of Aerial Photographs
ERTS Two-Inch RBV Cameras Performance Characteristics
Additive Color Techniques for the Analysis of ERTS Imagery
The Effects of Picture Operations in the Fourier Domain and Vice Versa
A Digital Processing and Analysis System for Multispectral Scanner and Similar Data
Land Use Classification From Multispectral Scanner Data
Reducing Variance in Remotely Sensed Multispectral Data : a Pragmatic Approach
Cluster Analysis of Multispectral Scanner Remote Sensor Data
The Use of a Simulator in a Synthetic Aperture Radar Data Processing Tradeoff Study
Rapid Processing of Multispectral Scanner Data Using Linear Techniques
A Model for Spectral Signature Variability for Mixtures
Spatial Frequency Analysis of Multispectral Data
An Integrated Feature Selection and Supervised Learning Scheme for Fast Computer Classification of Multi-Spectral Data
Unsupervised Classification of Earth Resources Data
The Application of Television Scanning Densitometers in the Field of Remote Sensing
The Design of a Universial Data Analysis System
Experience With the CrossBeam Photometer System
Luminescence Signature Induced by Lasers With Enhanced Specificity for Remote Active Sensing
Radiation Balance Mapping with Multispectral Scanner Data |
Numéro de notice : |
16533A |
Affiliation des auteurs : |
non IGN |
Thématique : |
IMAGERIE |
Nature : |
Actes |
Permalink : |
https://documentation.ensg.eu/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=34809 |
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