• DocumentCode
    583988
  • Title

    Future perspectives of advancing multimodal polsar technology, its rapid worldwide expansion, and its plethora of diversified applications

  • Author

    Boerner, W. ; Professor, E.

  • Author_Institution
    USA UIC-ECE/CSN, Univ. of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA
  • fYear
    2012
  • fDate
    Oct. 29 2012-Nov. 2 2012
  • Firstpage
    98
  • Lastpage
    101
  • Abstract
    With the un-abating global population increase our natural resources are stressed as never before, and the global day/night monitoring of the terrestrial covers from the mesosphere to the litho-sphere becomes all the more urgent. Microwave radar sensors are ideally suited for space imaging because those are almost weather independent, and microwaves propagate through the atmosphere with little deteriorating effects due to clouds, storms, rain, fog aerosol and haze. Globally humidity, haze and aerosols next to cloudiness are increasing at a rather rapid pace, whereas only 20 years ago all of those covered only 48% of the globe, today those have increased to about 62% and within another 20 years may exceed 80% for irreversible reasons. Thus, optical remote sensing from space especially in the tropical and sub-tropical vegetated belts is already and will become ever more ineffective, and microwave remote sensing technology must now be advanced strongly and most rapidly hand in hand with digital communications technology because operationally it is more rapidly available especially for disaster mitigation assistance.
  • Keywords
    mesosphere; radar polarimetry; remote sensing by radar; synthetic aperture radar; clouds; deteriorating effects; digital communications; disaster mitigation assistance; diversified applications; fog aerosol; global day/night monitoring; haze; lithosphere; mesosphere; microwave radar sensors; microwave remote sensing technology; multimodal POLSAR technology; natural resources; optical remote sensing; rain; rapid worldwide expansion; space imaging; storms; sub-tropical vegetated belts; un-abating global population; Microwave imaging; Remote sensing; Satellites; Scattering; Sensors; Spaceborne radar; Synthetic aperture radar;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Antennas and Propagation (ISAP), 2012 International Symposium on
  • Conference_Location
    Nagoys
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4673-1001-7
  • Type

    conf

  • Filename
    6393860