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satellitederived

Satellite-derived refers to information, measurements, or products obtained from observations made by Earth-orbiting satellites. These data are usually the result of remotely sensed measurements across one or more spectral, radar, or altimetric instruments and are transformed into higher-level variables such as maps, indices, or estimates for various applications. The term is widely used across disciplines to describe data products created from satellite imagery and related sensor data rather than from ground-based or airborne sources.

Typical data sources include optical sensors on satellites like Landsat, Sentinel-2, and MODIS; radar instruments such

Applications span many sectors, including agriculture and food security (crop health, yield estimation), forestry (biomass, deforestation

as
Sentinel-1
SAR;
ocean
color
sensors
for
mapping
chlorophyll;
and
altimeters
used
for
sea
surface
height.
Derived
products
range
from
land
cover
classifications
and
vegetation
indices
to
surface
temperature,
soil
moisture,
precipitation
estimates,
sea
surface
temperature,
and
atmospheric
corrections.
Processing
workflows
usually
involve
calibration,
georeferencing,
atmospheric
and
radiometric
correction,
data
fusion,
and
the
application
of
domain-specific
algorithms
to
generate
usable
variables.
monitoring),
hydrology
(soil
moisture,
flood
mapping),
climate
science
(long-term
trends,
anomaly
detection),
urban
planning,
and
disaster
response.
Advantages
of
satellite-derived
data
include
global,
repeatable
coverage
and
the
ability
to
monitor
inaccessible
regions
over
long
timescales.
Limitations
can
include
cloud
cover
for
optical
data,
resolution
constraints,
need
for
validation
with
in-situ
measurements,
data
volume,
and
licensing
or
access
restrictions.
The
term
underscores
data
that
originate
from
satellites
and
are
transformed
into
practical
information
products.