Volcanoes
Volcanic activity is the object of constant study and analysis to improve land use planning and help minimise hazard in risk areas. Authorities often need data over volcanic areas, not only to monitor eruptions, but also to produce maps and thematic diagrams predicting the potential risk to the surrounding environment.
Remote sensing data, which can provide an overview of large volcanic areas in a single frame, is used to detect lithological differences, vegetation changes, altimetric variations, and the extent of urban development in endangered areas.
Volcanicanoes are mainly studied with optical data from instruments like AATSR and MERIS onboard ENVISAT, so that the same ground target can be examined in different spectral bands, ranging from visible to far infrared.
Radar data from instruments like SAR make a unique contribution when altimetric change must be detected, or when volcanic eruptions cause phenomena that can be monitored by radar sensors like lava flow, ground fissures, earthquakes, mud slides, floods, etc.
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