Application of Remote Sensing Cloud Computing in Land Surface Change
A special issue of Atmosphere (ISSN 2073-4433). This special issue belongs to the section "Atmospheric Techniques, Instruments, and Modeling".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (10 September 2021) | Viewed by 12576
Special Issue Editors
Interests: land use and land cover; climate change; ecosystem service; remote sensing
Interests: atmospheric modelling; numerical weather prediction; climate change and predictability; tropical cyclones; weather and climate extremes; turbulence; atmospheric convection; atmospheric radiation; meteorology; solar and wind energy assessment and prediction; cloud physics; large-scale climate dynamics and satellite remote sensing of clouds and aerosols
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Human behavior leads to changes in the earth’s land surface, which has become the primary problem hindering global sustainable development. In nearly half a century, remote sensing technology, especially cloud computing technology in remote sensing, has provided an advanced detection and research approach for investigating land surface change, monitoring regional environmental change, and even global warming. Remote sensing imagery, as one of the sources for big data, is generating earth-observation data and analysis results daily from satellites, manned/unmanned aircraft, and cloud computing platform, which can directly be applied to ecology, geography, and sociology.
Remote sensing data is increasingly rich, but limited by software and hardware, the ability of data operation makes the analysis of multi-source remote sensing data very difficult and time-consuming. The remote sensing cloud computing platforms such as Google Earth Engine (GEE) provided a feasible way to deal with the outlined difficulties. This Special Issue invites contributors to discuss their latest findings using remote sensing data and cloud computing to explore related topics on exploring land surface change.
Topics include the application of remote sensing in quantifying spatio-temporal changes of land cover, land-use mapping, urban expansion, flood and drought, and ecosystem services and agriculture. We encourage a synthesis of the emerging cloud computing methods, which should strengthen the role of remote sensing in providing operational, efficient, and long-term services for ecology, agriculture, geography, climate change, and sociology applications.
Dr. Yaoping Cui
Dr. Abhnil Prasad
Guest Editors
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Keywords
- remote sensing
- data fusion
- spatio-temporal change
- land use mapping
- urban expansion
- cloud computing
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