AbstractThis paper presents a compendium of satellites under civilian and/or commercial control with the potential to gather global land-cover observations. From this we show that a growing number of sovereign states are acquiring capacity for space based land-cover observations and show how geopolitical patterns of ownership are changing. We discuss how the number of satellites flying at any time has progressed as a function of increased launch rates and mission longevity, and how the spatial resolutions of the data they collect has evolved. The first such satellite was launched by the USA in 1972. Since then government and/or private entities in 33 other sovereign states and geopolitical groups have chosen to finance such missions and 197...
Emerging countries worldwide can benefit technologically, economically, and socially from domestic s...
Space offers the potential for practically limitless wealth, some already being exploited, some we m...
There is an increasing need for Earth Observation (EO) missions to meet the information requirements...
AbstractThis paper presents a compendium of satellites under civilian and/or commercial control with...
More people in more countries have access to data from global land-cover observing satellites over a...
Since the early 1960s the US and the USSR have had a monopoly on highly detailed surveillance inform...
While space capabilities were once concentrated among a handful of leading powers, an increasingly l...
Spatial information linked to the observation of the Earth is increasingly present in natural resour...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
Satellite remote sensing has come a long way in the last 2 decades to map and monitor our changing p...
Landsat 1 began an era of space-based resource data collec-tion that changed the way science, indust...
Potential applications of LANDSAT remote sensing technology to worldwide resources management are di...
Principle 1(a) of United Nation Principles Relating to Remote Sensing of the Earth From Space define...
This article examines the dynamics of an emerging multi-use paradigm for satellite remote sensing (R...
Space offers the potential for practically limitless wealth, some already being exploited, some we m...
Emerging countries worldwide can benefit technologically, economically, and socially from domestic s...
Space offers the potential for practically limitless wealth, some already being exploited, some we m...
There is an increasing need for Earth Observation (EO) missions to meet the information requirements...
AbstractThis paper presents a compendium of satellites under civilian and/or commercial control with...
More people in more countries have access to data from global land-cover observing satellites over a...
Since the early 1960s the US and the USSR have had a monopoly on highly detailed surveillance inform...
While space capabilities were once concentrated among a handful of leading powers, an increasingly l...
Spatial information linked to the observation of the Earth is increasingly present in natural resour...
To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contribu...
Satellite remote sensing has come a long way in the last 2 decades to map and monitor our changing p...
Landsat 1 began an era of space-based resource data collec-tion that changed the way science, indust...
Potential applications of LANDSAT remote sensing technology to worldwide resources management are di...
Principle 1(a) of United Nation Principles Relating to Remote Sensing of the Earth From Space define...
This article examines the dynamics of an emerging multi-use paradigm for satellite remote sensing (R...
Space offers the potential for practically limitless wealth, some already being exploited, some we m...
Emerging countries worldwide can benefit technologically, economically, and socially from domestic s...
Space offers the potential for practically limitless wealth, some already being exploited, some we m...
There is an increasing need for Earth Observation (EO) missions to meet the information requirements...