Interferometric synthetic-aperature radar (InSAR): Chapter 5
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Abstract
Geodesists are, for the most part, a patient and hardworking lot. A day spent hiking to a distant peak, hours spent waiting for clouds to clear a line-of-sight between observation points, weeks spent moving methodically along a level line – such is the normal pulse of the geodetic profession. The fruits of such labors are all the more precious because they are so scarce. A good day spent with an electronic distance meter (EDM) or level typically produces fewer than a dozen data points. A year of tiltmeter output sampled at ten-minute intervals constitutes less than half a megabyte of data. All of the leveling data ever collected at Yellowstone Caldera fit comfortably on a single PC diskette. These quantities are trivial by modern data-storage standards, in spite of the considerable efforts expended to produce them.
| Publication type | Book chapter |
|---|---|
| Publication Subtype | Book Chapter |
| Title | Interferometric synthetic-aperature radar (InSAR): Chapter 5 |
| Year Published | 2007 |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | Springer-Verlag |
| Publisher location | Berlin |
| Contributing office(s) | Volcano Hazards Program |
| Description | 42 p. |
| Larger Work Type | Book |
| Larger Work Title | Volcano deformation - Geodetic monitoring techniques |
| First page | 153 |
| Last page | 194 |
| Online Only (Y/N) | N |
| Additional Online Files (Y/N) | N |