ABSTRACT

Introduction to Microwave Remote Sensing offers an extensive overview of this versatile and extremely precise technology for technically oriented undergraduates and graduate students.

This textbook emphasizes an important shift in conceptualization and directs it toward students with prior knowledge of optical remote sensing: the author dispels any linkage between microwave and optical remote sensing. Instead, he constructs the concept of microwave remote sensing by comparing it to the process of audio perception, explaining the workings of the ear as a metaphor for microwave instrumentation.

This volume takes an “application-driven” approach. Instead of describing the technology and then its uses, this textbook justifies the need for measurement then explains how microwave technology addresses this need.

Following a brief summary of the field and a history of the use of microwaves, the book explores the physical properties of microwaves and the polarimetric properties of electromagnetic waves. It examines the interaction of microwaves with matter, analyzes passive atmospheric and passive surface measurements, and describes the operation of altimeters and scatterometers. The textbook concludes by explaining how high resolution images are created using radars, and how techniques of interferometry can be applied to both passive and active sensors.

chapter 1|5 pages

Why Microwaves?

chapter 2|16 pages

A Brief History of Microwaves

chapter 3|42 pages

Physical Fundamentals

chapter 4|27 pages

Polarimetry

chapter 5|57 pages

Microwaves in the Real World

chapter 6|27 pages

Detecting Microwaves

chapter 7|25 pages

Atmospheric Sounding

chapter 8|16 pages

Passive Imaging

chapter 9|37 pages

Active Microwaves

chapter 10|45 pages

Imaging Radar

chapter 11|38 pages

Interferometry