Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (171)
Search Results
- 171
Academic Journals
- 171
-
From:Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics (Vol. 12, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedByline: S. Versick, G. P. Stiller, T. von Clarmann, T. Reddmann, N. Glatthor, U. Grabowski, M. Hö,pfner, S. Kellmann, M. Kiefer, A. Linden, R. Ruhnke, H. Fischer To access, purchase, authenticate, or subscribe to...
-
From:Human Ecology (Vol. 43, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedAs the Ebola crisis continues in West Africa, Anna Tate '11, a master's of public health student at Emory University, is helping health care workers slow the spread of disease. The virus, which claimed 7,500 lives in...
-
From:Advances in Natural and Applied Sciences (Vol. 9, Issue 12) Peer-ReviewedIn this paper, the segmentation process is attentive on hyperspectral satellite images. The input hyperspectral image embodies of image data at peculiar frequencies over the electromagnetic spectrum. The existing...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 540, Issue 7633) Peer-ReviewedHigh-resolution satellite mapping of Earth's surface water during the past 32 years reveals changes in the planet's water systems, including the influence of natural cycles and human activities. See Letter p.418 A...
-
From:Government Computer News (Vol. 24, Issue 1)Within hours of the tsunami that struck in the Indian Ocean late last month, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency received requests for assistance in using satellite imagery to assess the damage. "We take...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 512, Issue 7514) Peer-ReviewedA commercial satellite that will produce the sharpest images of Earth yet was launched on 13 August by DigitalGlobe, a company in Longmont, Colorado. The WorldView-3 satellite will image the planet at a resolution of 31...
-
From:Information & Culture (Vol. 53, Issue 3-4) Peer-ReviewedThis article examines the changing framework for producing satellite weather data in the United States since the 2000s, from a government function to one increasingly carried out by the private sector. It explores the...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 506, Issue 7488) Peer-ReviewedResearchers have for the first time counted whales from space, tallying 55 "probable" southern right whales and several other whale-like objects off the coast of Argentina. Peter Fretwell and colleagues at the...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 577, Issue 7788) Peer-ReviewedMore than one-third of Earth's landmass is drained by rivers that seasonally freeze over. Ice transforms the hydrologic.sup.1,2, ecologic.sup.3,4, climatic.sup.5 and socio-economic.sup.6-8 functions of river corridors....
-
From:International Journal of GeophysicsPeer-ReviewedThe paper concerns the use of multitemporal high-resolution satellite images for the study of the ancient city of Ur, in southern Mesopotamia, inaccessible to scholars from 2003. The acquired dataset is composed by two...
-
From:Progress In Electromagnetics Research M (Vol. 78) Peer-ReviewedHaving the imaging ability of the area in front of flight direction, forward-looking synthetic aperture radar (SAR) has become a hot topic in areas of SAR research. Nevertheless, constrained by limited azimuth aperture...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 513, Issue 7519) Peer-ReviewedArctic sea-ice coverage reached its probable annual minimum on 17 September, spanning 5.02 million square kilometres. The measurement, reported by the US National Snow and Ice Data Center in Boulder, Colorado, continues...
-
From:Antiquity (Vol. 76, Issue 294) Peer-ReviewedThe application of satellite image analysis to archaeology is well known (Kennedy 1997: 71-93), but it is less frequently applied to the location of potential archaeological sites. The South Sinai Survey and Excavation...
-
From:Proceedings of the International Association of Hydrological Sciences (Vol. 373) Peer-ReviewedData assimilation has the potential to improve flood forecasting. However, it is rarely employed in distributed hydrologic models for operational predictions. In this study, we present variational assimilation of river...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 592, Issue 7856) Peer-ReviewedGlaciers distinct from the Greenland and Antarctic ice sheets are shrinking rapidly, altering regional hydrology.sup.1, raising global sea level.sup.2 and elevating natural hazards.sup.3. Yet, owing to the scarcity of...
-
From:Anthropological Quarterly (Vol. 85, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedThis paper assesses the conceptual and technological negotiation of an absolute end. The idea of a total ending is sublime: it is located outside of language and powerful precisely because of its sheer...
-
From:Journal of the Air & Waste Management Association (Vol. 59, Issue 11) Peer-ReviewedABSTRACT Aerosol optical depth (AOD) acquired from satellite measurements demonstrates good correlation with particulate matter with diameters less than 2.5 [micro]m ([PM.sub.2.5]) in some regions of the United...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 485, Issue 7400) Peer-ReviewedAerial photographs of Greenland from the 1930s--rediscovered in a castle outside Copenhagen--could provide a deeper understanding of the impact of climate change on the island's glaciers than the use of satellite data...
-
From:Mathematical Problems in EngineeringPeer-ReviewedThis paper studies the image fusion of high-resolution panchromatic image and low-resolution multispectral image. Based on the classic fusion algorithms on remote sensing image fusion, the PCA (principal component...
-
From:Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society (Vol. 98, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedA new website of up-to-date aerosol products is aimed at helping decision-makers with timely judgements on how to best protect lives and property during a wildfire. The Enhanced Infusing Satellite Data Into...