Title: GGS756-001 Physical Principles of Remote Sensing CRN: 78545 Time: Tuesday 7:20 - 10:00 PM Classroom: Exploratory Hall 2103 Instructor: Dr. John Qu Telephone: (703) 993-3958 Office: Exploratory Hall, Room 3411 Office Hour: Stop by Monday or make appointment
Course Description
This course is designed to give students with limited Earth science satellite remote sensing background a thorough introduction to gather the basic concepts and fundamentals of physical principles of remote sensing. The main emphasis of this course is on the basic physical and mathematical principles underlying the satellite remote sensing techniques, including radiometric and geometric information, satellite orbit and geo-location simulation, science algorithm designing, atmosphere corrections, and in situ measurements in support of remote sensing. In addition, this class will provide a focus on the NASA current and future Earth Observing System (EOS) instruments, such as the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), future National Polar-orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS, now JPSS) and NPOESS Preparatory Project (NPP, now Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership) missions. These students will understand not only what remote sensing systems do, but how they work. ScheduleFinal project Grading (A=90-100, B=80-89, C=70-79, D=60-69, F=<60) Prerequisite Required Textbook: None Reference Books and Documents
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