Space Shuttle Columbia views the world with imaging radar: The SIR-A experiment
Abstract
Images acquired by the Shuttle Imaging Radar (SIR-A) in November 1981, demonstrate the capability of this microwave remote sensor system to perceive and map a wide range of different surface features around the Earth. A selection of 60 scenes displays this capability with respect to Earth resources - geology, hydrology, agriculture, forest cover, ocean surface features, and prominent man-made structures. The combined area covered by the scenes presented amounts to about 3% of the total acquired. Most of the SIR-A images are accompanied by a LANDSAT multispectral scanner (MSS) or SEASAT synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) image of the same scene for comparison. Differences between the SIR-A image and its companion LANDSAT or SEASAT image at each scene are related to the characteristics of the respective imaging systems, and to seasonal or other changes that occurred in the time interval between acquisition of the images.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- January 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983STIN...8318977F
- Keywords:
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- Backscattering;
- Columbia (Orbiter);
- Earth Resources Shuttle Imaging Radar;
- Multispectral Band Scanners;
- Synthetic Aperture Radar;
- Agriculture;
- Dunes;
- Hydrology;
- Oceanographic Parameters;
- Plains;
- Plateaus;
- Remote Sensing;
- Shuttle Imaging Radar;
- Volcanology;
- Communications and Radar