Remote Sensing
This is the approved revision of this page, as well as being the most recent.
This page is about the applications of machine learning (ML) in the context of remote sensing. For an overview of remote sensing more generally, please see the Wikipedia page on this topic.
Machine learning can be applied to remote sensing data to infer climate-relevant information. Some selected examples include:[1]
- Mapping power grids and solar panel locations.
- Mapping building footprints.
- Pinpointing occurrences of deforestation.
- Creating an inventory of global greenhouse gas emissions.
Background ReadingsEdit
Online Courses and Course MaterialsEdit
CommunityEdit
Libraries and ToolsEdit
DataEdit
Satellite imagery datasetsEdit
High-resolution RGB satellite images (for visual predictions)Edit
Public datasets
- United States Geological Survey
- Copernicus (Sentinel satellites)
- NASA Worldview
- Google Earth (permission needed for research use)
- Sentinel Hub (Sentinel, Landsat, Envisat, etc.)
Commercial datasets
- DigitalGlobe (up to 31cm resolution)
- Planet (up to 72cm resolution)
Multispectral satellite images (5-13 visible and infrared bands)Edit
Public datasets
Commercial datasets
Hyperspectral satellite images (up to a few hundred visible and infrared bands)Edit
Public datasets
See also
- Table 1 of the review "Survey of Hyperspectral Earth Observation Applications from Space in the Sentinel-2 Context"[2] for comparisons between sources.
General satellite imagesEdit
- Awesome Satellite Imagery Datasets: List of aerial and satellite imagery datasets with annotations for computer vision and deep learning.
Street view datasetsEdit
ReferencesEdit
- ↑ "Tackling climate change in the EU". Climate Change and Law Collection.
- ↑ Transon, Julie; d’Andrimont, Raphaël; Maugnard, Alexandre; Defourny, Pierre (2018-01-23). "Survey of Hyperspectral Earth Observation Applications from Space in the Sentinel-2 Context". Remote Sensing. 10 (3): 157. doi:10.3390/rs10020157. ISSN 2072-4292.