Authors
Michael E Schaepman, Susan L Ustin, Antonio J Plaza, Thomas H Painter, Jochem Verrelst, Shunlin Liang
Publication date
2009/9/1
Source
Remote Sensing of Environment
Volume
113
Pages
S123-S137
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The science of spectroscopy has existed for more than three centuries, and imaging spectroscopy for the Earth system for three decades. We first discuss the historical background of spectroscopy, followed by imaging spectroscopy, introducing a common definition for the latter. The relevance of imaging spectroscopy is then assessed using a comprehensive review of the cited literature. Instruments, technological advancements and (pre-)processing approaches are discussed to set the scene for application related advancements. We demonstrate these efforts using four examples that represent progress due to imaging spectroscopy, namely (i) bridging scaling gaps from molecules to ecosystems using coupled radiative transfer models (ii) assessing surface heterogeneity including clumping, (iii) physical based (inversion) modeling, and iv) assessing interaction of light with the Earth surface. Recent advances of …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
ME Schaepman, SL Ustin, AJ Plaza, TH Painter… - Remote Sensing of Environment, 2009