![]() |
||
|
||
| Radio-Controlled Helicopter to Check Space Views of Land Cover Yoshiaki Honda of the Center for Environmental Remote Sensing at Chiba University, Japan, developed the radio-controlled helicopter sensor package that will be used over validation sites in Arizona, New Mexico, Kansas, Montana, British Columbia, and Oregon.
Alfredo R. Huete, coordinator of the U.S. field campaign, University of Arizona Terrestrial Biophysics and Remote Sensing Program, Tucson, Ariz., (520) 621-3228; ahuete@ag.arizona.edu Lori Stiles, University of Arizona News Services, Tucson, Ariz., (520) 621-1877; lstiles@u.arizona.edu Science Goals: "What makes this system unique is that the helicopter can get data from all possible angles," says campaign coordinator Alredo Huete of the University of Arizona. "That's very important to the satellite system, because the satellite views any given spot on Earth almost every day, but at different angles over all the different surfaces - desert shrub, or forest tree or grassland." Infrastructure: Honda's group prototyped and successfully tested their RC helicopter last year in the Mongolian grasslands, which is an EOS validation core site. Honda is principal investigator for Japan's Global Imager (GLI), a global vegetation monitoring experiment. Japan's space agency is planning to launch GLI aboard ADEOS2 in early 2001. Location and Schedule:
|
|
Subscribe to the Earth Observatory
About the Earth Observatory Please send comments or questions to: eo-contact@eodomo.gsfc.nasa.gov Program Manager: David Herring Responsible NASA official: Yoram Kaufman NASA/GSFC Security and Privacy Statement |