ABSTRACT
The interest in video imaging has increased in the last decade. The ability to see a live image on a monitor during acquisition makes video images more error proof. Video is useful for monitoring purposes, and the video electronic signals provide a format for digital image acquisition. A publication (Meisner, 1986) on the fundamentals of airborne video remote sensing provided a useful guide to equipment for remote sensing applications. Infra-red photography has been used to locate stress areas with remote sensing techniques. The increased research activity and interest in video imaging by several laboratories insures significant advances in video techniques and applications for crop management and production research.
|