Quantitative remote sensing inversion in earth science: Theory and numerical treatment

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Abstract

Quantitative remote sensing is an appropriate way to estimate structural parameters and spectral component signatures of Earth surface cover type. Since the real physical system that couples the atmosphere, water, and the land surface is very complicated and should be a continuous process, sometimes it requires a comprehensive set of parameters to describe such a system, so any practical physical model can only be approximated by a mathematical model which includes only a limited number of the most important parameters that capture the major variation of the real system. The pivot problem for quantitative remote sensing is the inversion. Inverse problems are typically ill-posed. The ill-posed nature is characterized by (C1) the solution may not exist, (C2) the dimension of the solution space may be infinite, and (C3) the solution is not continuous with variations of the observed signals. These issues exist nearly for all inverse problems in geoscience and quantitative remote sensing. For example, when the observation system is band-limited or sampling is poor, i.e., there are too few observations, or directions are poor located, the inversion process would be underdetermined, which leads to the large condition number of the normalized system and the significant noise propagation. Hence (C2) and (C3) would be the highlight difficulties for quantitative remote sensing inversion. This chapter will address the theory and methods from the viewpoint that the quantitative remote sensing inverse problems can be represented by kernel-based operator equations and solved by coupling regularization and optimization methods.

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Wang, Y. (2015). Quantitative remote sensing inversion in earth science: Theory and numerical treatment. In Handbook of Geomathematics: Second Edition (pp. 1775–1806). Springer Berlin Heidelberg. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-54551-1_26

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