Photo by USGS on Unsplash

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Caption: Straight highways fan out like spokes on a wheel from the Argentine city of San Luis. To the right of the city are croplands that resemble colorful confetti. Photo by USGS on Unsplash.

Alt Text: Straight highways fan out like spokes on a wheel from the Argentine city of San Luis. To the right of the city are croplands that resemble colorful confetti.

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Photo courtesy of Jennifer Watts.

How do remote sensors work?

This is the first in a three-part series on remote sensing. Check out the second article, “What can remote sensing tell you about your field?” here.

Most remote sensing techniques are next door neighbors with visible light on the electromagnetic spectrum. Graphic by Karen Brey.

Most remote sensing techniques are next door neighbors with visible light on the electromagnetic spectrum. Graphic by Karen Brey.

**The short answer: Remote sensors capture information about electromagnetic energy emitted or reflected from plants and the landscape.

Break it down: Remote sensors can be classified based on how they gather information and their distance from the target.

Cropland-CROS, Crop-CASMA, and VegScape are available at the links embedded here. You can find Google Earth Engine here. And here is direct imagery from the Landsat 8 and Sentinel satellites.

Cropland-CROS, Crop-CASMA, and VegScape are available at the links embedded here. You can find Google Earth Engine here. And here is direct imagery from the Landsat 8 and Sentinel satellites.

Let’s tackle distance first. Remote sensors can be used as standalone machines in the lab, in handheld devices, mounted on tractors, attached to drones or unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs), on airplanes or helicopters, or on low earth orbit satellites. Their distance away from the objects that the sensor is measuring determines their resolution and how much data are collected.

Beyond distance, sensors are classified as either passive or active.

Passive remote sensors sense energy coming from somewhere other than the sensor. The most common source of outside energy is sunlight! These sensors include:

  1. Cameras. Your average handheld camera capture electromagnetic information from the visible spectrum, based on the colors reflected from the sun.
  2. Thermal infrared remote sensing (TIR). Thermal sensors sense infrared radiation—heat! In an agricultural field, an infrared view of the canopy or individual plant leaves can show whether those plants are under water stress. There’s also new research exploring how TIR can identify plant species even from great distances using their “thermal fingerprint.
  3. Hyperspectral radiometers differentiate spectral bands in the visible, near-infrared, and mid-infrared ranges.