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Remote Sensing of Environmental Changes in Cold Regions
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This Special Issue gathers papers reporting recent advances in the remote sensing of cold regions. It includes contributions presenting improvements in modeling microwave emissions from snow, assessment of satellite-based sea ice concentration products, satellite monitoring of ice jam and glacier lake outburst floods, satellite mapping of snow depth and soil freeze/thaw states, near-nadir interferometric imaging of surface water bodies, and remote sensing-based assessment of high arctic lake environment and vegetation recovery from wildfire disturbances in Alaska. A comprehensive review is presented to summarize the achievements, challenges, and opportunities of cold land remote sensing.
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Keywords
- aerial photographs
- Alaska
- antarctica
- Arctic navigation
- Arctic wetlands
- Athabasca River
- China
- Climate Change
- cryosphere
- decomposition
- desiccation
- elevation
- Everest
- Fort McMurray
- Frozen soil
- FY-3D/MWRI
- glacial lake
- global change
- ground-based radiometer
- Himalaya
- ice run
- L-band emission
- lake
- Landsat
- microwave radiation response depth (MRRD)
- microwave radiometer experiment
- MODIS
- n/a
- near-nadir SAR
- northern high latitudes
- parameterized model
- passive microwave
- protected areas
- Qinghai–Tibet Plateau
- RADARSAT-2
- Reference, information & interdisciplinary subjects
- regional algorithms
- Remote sensing
- Research & information: general
- sea ice concentration
- shipborne observation
- Snow
- snow depth
- supraglacial pond
- Tian Gong 2
- Tibetan Plateau
- tundra ponds
- WALOMIS
- Wetlands
- wildfire