Geography Reference
In-Depth Information
hydraulic studies. Remote sensing techniques cannot measure it directly, but they
suggest approaches based on LULC-features classification and climatic factors
(e.g., solar radiation, temperature, humidity, surface albedo, etc.).
Also, for runoff measurement, techniques of remote sensing provide a source of
input-data (watershed geometry, drainage networks, empirical flood peak, LULC-
classes,
etc.),
and
help
to
estimate
equation
coefficients
and
other
model
parameters.
References
Chavez, P. S. (1996). Image-based atmospheric corrections-revisited and improved. Photogram-
metric Engineering & Remote Sensing, 62(9), 1025-1036.
Huete, A., Justice, C., & Liu, H. (1994). Development of vegetation and soil indices for MODIS-
EOS. Remote Sensing of Environment, 29, 224-234.
Mas, J. F. (1999). Monitoring land-cover changes: A comparison of change detection techniques.
International Journal of Remote Sensing, 20(1), 139-152.
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