The first sessions of the course contain reading materials, such as peer-reviewed papers and technical reports. You will find the reading materials for the next session at the end of each session. We highlight aspects to focus upon to streamline the reading process. As an introduction to the first session, please read the following two papers:
We use openly available and platform independent (Windows, Linux, MacOS) software packages throughout this course. If you use your own machine, please install the latest versions of:
We have already prepared the datasets and provide you with direct download links for each session.
However, all data used during the course is in general openly accessible (after registration). For example, we will be working with satellite images from the Landsat and Sentinel-2 archives, which you can access (among other platforms) through the USGS Earth Explorer or ESA´s Copernicus Open Access Hub, respectively. The precourse section provides a short overview on how to access these archives by yourselves.
It will be helpful to organize your data in such a way that you can
easily access it during the course, at home, as well as across your
fellow group members. One way to do this would be to use a cloud storage
service. We recommend either using a service you may already use
privately (e.g. Google Drive), or as HU-students use the HU-Box which you can easily sync to
your local harddrive using the Seafil-client (Setup
instructions). We also suggest to organize the course data in a main
folder containing the subfolders either for each session or along
categories such as data
and code
.
Each session you will practise your remote sensing skills along weekly assignments. These are described within the respective session’s subpage on this website and comprise several tasks that involve scripting in R, working with QGIS, or Google Earth Pro. In order to be eligible for writing the final exam, course participants must succesfully complete at least 75% of the assignments.
The submission format is a knitted markdown file. We have prepared a
blueprint
of an .Rmd-file you can use for each session. Please name the script
according to your group member’s names
EO_assignment_S[session-number]_name1_name2_nameX.Rmd
, knit
it to HTML
and upload both files (.Rmd
and
.hmtl
) to Moodle.
The weekly submission deadline is Monday, 10:00am.
Copyright © 2020 Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin. Department of Geography.