Hongbo Su was appointed as an Associate Editor for The Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (JARS), starting from February of 2020.
The Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (JARS) is an online journal that optimizes the communication of concepts, information, and progress within the remote sensing community to improve the societal benefit for monitoring and management of natural disasters, weather forecasting, agricultural and urban land-use planning, environmental quality monitoring, ecological restoration, and numerous other commercial and scientific applications. The journal has an Impact Factor of 1.344in 2019.
JARS is one of the SPIE journals. SPIE (Society of Photographic Instrumentation Engineers), the international society for optics and photonics, was founded in 1955 to advance light-based technologies.
Topics covered by the journal include, but are not limited to, the following areas:
Theoretical Innovation: Exploration of advances in physical, mathematical, and optical modeling for signature band analyses toward change detection studies with high-end image processing, pattern recognition, machine learning, evolutionary computing, soft computing, data fusion, and data assimilation techniques, such as:
- Advanced remote sensing theory for improving the understanding of global-, regional-, and local-scale atmospheric, oceanic, and terrestrial systems
- System engineering for on-board and on-ground data receiving, transmission compression, processing, distribution, access, archiving, and integration
- Multisensor and cross-mission image and data fusion technologies for improving remote sensing monitoring and modeling capability to aid in decision making
- Information analysis, data mining, machine learning, evolutionary computing, soft computing, and data management for remote sensing imageries
- Multitarget tracking using multispectral, hyperspectral, radar, and lidar remote sensing theory
- Integrated remote sensing, communication, networking, and control technologies
Interdisciplinary Applications: Bidirectional or multidirectional interfaces among different remote sensing communities for highly interdisciplinary studies, such as:
- Experimental concepts for the optimal utilization of various types of remote sensing data
- Remote sensing target selection, data acquisition, algorithm development calibration, validation, and product applications
- Remote sensing in support of seamless integration of the following subject areas:
- climatology, meteorology, and numerical weather prediction
- ecological restoration, agricultural production, and natural resources management with coupled numerical modeling
- energy sources exploration and management
- land-cover and land-use change, land management, mining, and urban planning
- water resources management and hydrological science
- natural and human hazard monitoring and management
- environmental quality monitoring and environmental pollution control
Photo-Optical Instrumentation and Design: Space satellite and airborne technology development in concert with ground-level receiving stations through sensors and platforms, communication networks, and orbital control strategies, such as:
- Planning, design, and calibration, intercalibration, and validation requirements for satellite instruments, platforms, and systems
- Pre- and postlaunch systems and instrumentation with interface design integration, testing, and packaging
- Space, airborne, and ground-based receiving technology development and transfer
- New orbital measurement concepts in support of remote sensing
- Remote sensing sensor technology development, technology transfer, and new instrumentation concepts
- Spacecraft and aircraft instrument navigation, coregistration, and measurement stability.