Product Description
An ideal reference for practioners, this book deals with the fundamental ideas underlying the rapidly growing field of remote sensing, The author explores energy-matter interaction, radiation propagation, data dissemination, and describes the tools and procedures required to extract information from remotely sensed data using the image chain approach. Organizations and individuals often focus on one aspect of the problem before considering it as a whole, thus invest… More >>
Remote Sensing: The Image Chain Approach
Tags: book deals, data dissemination, fundamental ideas, matter interaction, propagation, radiation, remote sensing
#1 by D. E. Prentiss on June 28, 2010 - 8:39 am
Most hard-core remote sensing engineers would love this book, especially those interested in the overall design and physics of sensors themselves. I don’t reference it as much as other texts I own on the subject, although I do reluctantly consider it a “must have” for remote sensing students who are interested in pursuing the field further. The price tag was not student-friendly, however.
Rating: 3 / 5
#2 by calvinnme on June 28, 2010 - 9:20 am
The other books on the subject of remote sensing mainly look like they were written by and for geologists. There is usually lots of tabular data, tons of prose on the subject, and very little in the way of mathematics or algorithms. This just won’t do if you are a programmer or engineer who needs to know how the final product got to be the final product, from optics to sensors to image processing. Engineers understand via equations and figures, and this book delivers those details.
Granted, the author does and must skip quite a few details when he is deriving equations such as the governing equation on the light that hits a sensor that appears to be coming from a target point. However, if the author was to go into those details the book would be 6000 pages long, not 600 pages. The part on image processing is OK, but still weaker than Gonzales and Woods book Digital Image Processing (3rd Edition). That book is essential if you want to manipulate the final product. Once again though, Schott had to delete some of the details in order to keep the book on track and on topic and prevent it from becoming an unwieldy tome. Highly recommended for engineers interested in remote sensing from an engineering standpoint.
Rating: 5 / 5