
UAV or Drones for Remote Sensing Applications
Volume 1
MDPI (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 14. November 2018
Book
Paperback/Softback
382 pages
978-3-03897-091-0 (ISBN)
Description
The rapid development and growth of unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) as a remote sensing platform, as well as advances in the miniaturization of instrumentation and data systems, have resulted in an increasing uptake of this technology in the environmental and remote sensing science communities.
Although tough regulations across the globe may still limit the broader use of UAVs, their use in precision agriculture, ecology, atmospheric research, disaster response biosecurity, ecological and reef monitoring, forestry, fire monitoring, quick response measurements for emergency disaster, Earth science research, volcanic gas sampling, monitoring of gas pipelines, mining plumes, humanitarian observations and biological/chemo-sensing tasks continues to increase.
This book provides a forum for high-quality peer-reviewed papers that broaden the awareness and understanding of UAV developments, applications of UAVs for remote sensing, and associated developments in sensor technology, data processing and communications, and UAV system design and sensing capabilities.
The book covers the following topics:
improvements in UAV sensor technology;
UAV sensor design;
descriptions of processing algorithms applied to UAV-based imagery datasets;
the use of optical, multi-spectral, hyperspectral, laser, and optical SAR technologies onboard UAVs;
Artificial intelligence and data mining-based strategies from UAV-acquired datasets;
UAV onboard data storage, transmission, and retrieval;
multiple platform UAV, AUV, and ground robot networks;
UAV sensor applications including: precision agriculture, construction, mining, pest detection, forestry, wildlife tracking, atmosphere, wildfire monitoring and prevention, reef monitoring, Earth science research pollution monitoring, micro-climates, land use precision agriculture, ecology, atmospheric research, quick response measurements for emergency disaster.
Although tough regulations across the globe may still limit the broader use of UAVs, their use in precision agriculture, ecology, atmospheric research, disaster response biosecurity, ecological and reef monitoring, forestry, fire monitoring, quick response measurements for emergency disaster, Earth science research, volcanic gas sampling, monitoring of gas pipelines, mining plumes, humanitarian observations and biological/chemo-sensing tasks continues to increase.
This book provides a forum for high-quality peer-reviewed papers that broaden the awareness and understanding of UAV developments, applications of UAVs for remote sensing, and associated developments in sensor technology, data processing and communications, and UAV system design and sensing capabilities.
The book covers the following topics:
improvements in UAV sensor technology;
UAV sensor design;
descriptions of processing algorithms applied to UAV-based imagery datasets;
the use of optical, multi-spectral, hyperspectral, laser, and optical SAR technologies onboard UAVs;
Artificial intelligence and data mining-based strategies from UAV-acquired datasets;
UAV onboard data storage, transmission, and retrieval;
multiple platform UAV, AUV, and ground robot networks;
UAV sensor applications including: precision agriculture, construction, mining, pest detection, forestry, wildlife tracking, atmosphere, wildfire monitoring and prevention, reef monitoring, Earth science research pollution monitoring, micro-climates, land use precision agriculture, ecology, atmospheric research, quick response measurements for emergency disaster.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Basel
Switzerland
Target group
Professional and scholarly
College/higher education
Profesionals/Scholars
Edition type
New edition
Product notice
Klappenbroschur
Illustrations
Illustrations
Dimensions
Height: 244 mm
Width: 170 mm
Thickness: 26 mm
Weight
816 gr
ISBN-13
978-3-03897-091-0 (9783038970910)
DOI
10.3390/books978-3-03897-092-7
Schweitzer Classification
Persons
Guest editor
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science, Australian Research Center for Aerospace Automation (ARCAA), Science and Engineering Faculty, Queensland University of Technology
Institute of Aerospace Sciences, School of Aerospace, Transport and Manufacturing, Cranfield University