Paper
4 November 1996 4-m-resolution multispectral satellite data and its implications for crop monitoring and distribution mapping
Jon Dykstra
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The utility of commercial satellite multispectral imagery for agricultural applications has traditionally been compromised by inadequate revisit times, time delays between image collection and delivery, and the imagery's spatial resolution. With the launch, in December 1997, of Space Imaging's remote sensing satellite, four-band multispectral imagery with resolutions as high as 4 meters, revisit times as frequent as once per day, and routine delivery times of as little as 48 hours will be commercially available. This new imagery, with it improved timeliness of information to the grower, promises to provide a valuable new information source for crop monitoring and distribution mapping.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jon Dykstra "4-m-resolution multispectral satellite data and its implications for crop monitoring and distribution mapping", Proc. SPIE 2818, Multispectral Imaging for Terrestrial Applications, (4 November 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.256081
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KEYWORDS
Satellites

Satellite imaging

Multispectral imaging

Satellite communications

Agriculture

Earth observing sensors

Remote sensing

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