Thermal Remote Sensing of Active Volcanoes: A User's Manual
Cambridge University Press
Edition: Illustrated, 4/18/2013
EAN 9780521859455, ISBN10: 052185945X
Hardcover, 736 pages, 24.9 x 18 x 3.8 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English
Encapsulating over one hundred years of research developments, this book is a comprehensive manual for measurements of Earth surface temperatures and heat fluxes, enabling better detection and measurement of volcanic activity. With a particular focus on volcanic hot spots, the book explores methodologies and principles used with satellite-, radiometer- and thermal-camera data. It presents traditional applications using satellite and ground based sensors as well as modern applications that have evolved for use with hand-held thermal cameras and is fully illustrated with case studies, databases and worked examples. Chapter topics include techniques for thermal mixture modelling and heat flux derivation, and methods for data collection, mapping and time-series generation. Appendices and online supplements present additional specific notes on areas of sensor application and data processing, supported by an extensive reference list. This book is an invaluable resource for academic researchers and graduate students in thermal remote sensing, volcanology, geophysics and planetary studies.
Preface
background, motivation and essential definitions
Acknowledgements
1. History of thermal remote sensing of active volcanism
2. Thermal remote sensing of active volcanism
principles
3. Satellite orbits and sensor resolution
4. The mixed pixel, the dual-band technique, heat loss and volume flux
5. Hot spot detection
6. Mapping, classification, time series and profiles
7. Broad-band radiometers
instrumentation and application
8. Broad-band radiometers
data collection and analysis principles
9. Broad–band thermal imaging cameras
Appendix A. Collation and summary of satellite-volcano radiometry
a literature database
Appendix B. Estimation of solar zenith angle and contribution of reflected radiation to at-satellite radiance
Appendix C. TM-Class sensors
Appendix D. AVHRR-Class sensors
Appendix E. GOES-Class sensors
Appendix F. Scan and satellite location geometry
Appendix G. Hot spot detection example
Appendix H. Optical pyrometers
References
Index.