Remote Sensing Applications To Marine Mining

International Marine Minerals Society
S. W. McCandless
Organization:
International Marine Minerals Society
Pages:
2
File Size:
52 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1986

Abstract

Since the mid 1970's, the science of remote sensing has invented and demonstrated sensors that hold unique promise for users that operate in the marine environment. Earlier, visible and infrared sensors provided images and temperature maps of surface conditions, but the 1970's introduced active (radars) and passive (radiometers) microwave sensors capable of penetrating clouds and operating day or night over the world's oceans. Space-based observation satellites permit these systems to span the globe many times each day, providing a view of the world's oceans and Arctic areas consistent with daily and, sometimes, hourly changes in the marine environment. Experimental satellites launched by NASA proved that such systems had great scientific merit, but, even more importantly, they could produce information valuable to marine transportation, fishing, and resource exploration and extraction. This latter subject includes the off-shore search and production of petroleum and natural gas resources and ocean mining as well. A few early satellites, such as GEOS-3, Nimbus-7, and most notably Seasat established that global wind fields, all weather sea surface temperature, ocean topography and sea state, and fine scale images of wave patterns, surfactants,
Citation

APA: S. W. McCandless  (1986)  Remote Sensing Applications To Marine Mining

MLA: S. W. McCandless Remote Sensing Applications To Marine Mining. International Marine Minerals Society, 1986.

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