Beginners Guide to Geospatial Intelligence & Remote Sensing in Plain English: How Satellites and Sensors See the World We Live In - Couverture souple

Carter, Jazper

 
9798904981167: Beginners Guide to Geospatial Intelligence & Remote Sensing in Plain English: How Satellites and Sensors See the World We Live In

Synopsis

Every day, satellite images appear in news broadcasts, insurance assessments, agricultural dashboards, and disaster briefings. Most people have seen them. Far fewer can actually read them. There is a gap between seeing a satellite image and understanding what it is, how it was made, and what decisions ride on it. That gap persists because the books explaining geospatial intelligence are written for engineers and remote sensing specialists. This book was written for everyone else. No equations. No code. No background in geography or physics required. Just clear, plain-English explanations of one of the most powerful technologies reshaping how organizations observe and act on the planet.

Inside this book, readers will learn how to:
Read satellite imagery with genuine comprehension: what wavelengths reveal, why image colors are often false, and what trained analysts see that casual observers miss
Grasp the full electromagnetic spectrum and why invisible wavelengths like near-infrared, thermal infrared, and synthetic aperture radar reveal what no ordinary camera can capture
Trace raw sensor data through the complete processing pipeline from orbit to analysis-ready imagery, with enough depth to evaluate vendor claims and data quality assurances
Apply change detection, vegetation indices, and land cover classification to real decisions in agriculture, emergency management, and urban development
Build geospatial literacy applicable to agriculture, climate science, emergency response, investigative journalism, and national security using the same conceptual toolkit
Evaluate AI-enhanced geospatial products critically and understand where confident-looking machine learning outputs can mislead decision-makers
Navigate free tools and global archives including Google Earth Engine, QGIS, Landsat, and the Copernicus Sentinel program, and know exactly where to begin
Ask sharp, informed questions of geospatial vendors, data science teams, and government briefers rather than accepting map outputs at face value
Understand GEOINT tradecraft, open-source satellite intelligence, and the ethical dimensions of near-continuous overhead surveillance

Geospatial intelligence no longer belongs exclusively to defense agencies and research institutions. It now shapes insurance underwriting, precision farming, emergency operations, investigative journalism, commodity trading, and city management. Satellite constellations image the entire Earth daily. Free archives from Landsat and the Copernicus program stretch back decades. Cloud platforms put global analysis within reach of anyone with a question. The bottleneck is no longer access. It is the conceptual literacy to use what is already available.

Nine tightly structured chapters move from the physics of how satellites observe the Earth to the practice of AI-driven analysis, anchored throughout in vivid real-world scenarios: wildfire response, crop stress detection, flood mapping, GEOINT tradecraft, and humanitarian operations. Every technical term is defined precisely where it first appears. No glossary required. Whether you are a data scientist encountering spatial data for the first time, a journalist evaluating satellite evidence, a manager vetting a geospatial vendor, or simply a curious professional, this book delivers geospatial literacy that is immediately and practically useful.

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