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期刊名称:JOURNAL OF APPLIED REMOTE SENSING

ISSN: 1931-3195
出版频率:Monthly
出版社:SPIE-SOC PHOTOPTICAL INSTRUMENTATION ENGINEERS, 1000 20TH ST, PO BOX 10, BELLINGHAM, USA, WA, 98225
  出版社网址:http://spie.org/
期刊网址:http://spie.org/x3636.xml
影响因子:螢(2008)
主题范畴:IMAGING SCIENCE & PHOTOGRAPHIC TECHNOLOGY;    REMOTE SENSING;    ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCES

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal
Scope

Beginning in 2007, Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (JARS) will publish an electronic journal that utilizes revolutionary technology to optimize the communication of concepts, information, and progress among the remote sensing community. Topics covered by the journal include, but are not limited to, the following areas:
  • Past, current, and future experimental, research, and operational atmospheric and environmental remote sensing programs and experiments
  • Program and experiment concepts, planning, implementation, strategic partnerships, policies, and measures of success leading to the optimal utilization of remote sensing data
  • Surveys and understanding of remote sensing user requirements for programs and experiments
  • Multiple interfaces among communities of data providers, algorithm developers, product producers, and end data assimilation, numerical weather prediction, and environmental monitoring users
  • Measurement characterization, specifically aspects related to methods for solidifying satellite instrument calibration and intercalibration requirements needed to measure small-scale signals associated with long-term global climate change
  • Identification of key satellite remote sensing validation problems/issues and development of methods for solving these issues
  • Satellite mission requirements and implementation
  • On-board and on-ground data receiving and processing techniques and engineering
  • Systems engineering for data distribution, access, archiving, and integration
  • Pre- and post-launch system and instrument checks, characterization, and calibration techniques and procedures
  • Instrument interface, integration, testing, and packaging
  • Space technology development, technology transfer, and new orbital measurement concepts
  • Remote sensing sensor technology development, technology transfer, and new instrumentation concepts
  • Spacecraft and instrument navigation, co-registration, and measurement stability
  • Remote sensing science, theory, and application, and utility training, education, workshops, and public outreach
  • Ecological remote sensing and coupled numerical modeling
  • Remote sensing data acquisition, communication, compression, system integration, algorithm development, data processing, target selection, product applications, calibration, validation, information analysis, mining, and management
  • Bidirectional interfaces among remote sensing communities of sensor designers/builders, data providers, algorithm developers, product producers, and end users
  • Remote sensing applications in the atmosphere, oceans, ecosystems, climate, agriculture, land cover/change, space, solar, ice/snow, hazard, fire, pollution, hydrology, and other environmental areas and their related information management, dissemination, and decision making
  • All relevant chains and links that are part of effective end-to-end remote sensing processing systems

Instructions to Authors

Prepare a manuscript

Manuscripts should be submitted in English, and the presentation should be as succinct as comprehension will permit. Metric units should be used unless to do so is not feasible or would result in a serious loss of clarity. Manuscripts are reviewed and refereed, after a prescreening process. Manuscripts that lack clarity or do not meet acceptable English standards may be rejected. Some manuscripts may require editing as a condition for final acceptance.

English-Language Editing Services:

Authors (particularly non-native English speakers) who would like assistance in improving the quality of English in their manuscripts prior to submission may wish to consider using an English-language editing service. Several commercial vendors provide such services, including American Journal Experts, SPi Professional Editing Services, and Nature Publishing Group. Please note that SPIE has no connection with any of these services and cannot provide an endorsement of their work. These services are mentioned for informational purposes only.

For details of manuscript preparation, see the topics below.

Formatting

Style Guide

Multimedia


Formatting

The Journal of Applied Remote Sensing is not typeset. Author-prepared files are used for publication. Therefore, all formatting guidelines must be followed precisely. Consult the Style Guide below and the sample manuscript (MS Word or PDF), and then use one of the following templates to prepare the manuscript:

MS Word template
LaTeX template

LaTeX users must convert their manuscript to PDF prior to submission.

MS Word users should submit their manuscript in MS Word. Word 2007 and the new .docx format should not be used, due to problems that this format causes in many existing production routines. If Word 2007 is unavoidable, back-save to the .doc format. However, please note that you must use MathType or Equation Editor 3.0 and not the more easily accessible Microsoft Math Editor. When equations built with Microsoft Math Editor are back-saved, they are converted to low-resolution graphics and will not be usable.

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Style Guide

Style: The Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (JARS) generally follows the guidelines found in the AIP Style Manual, available from the American Institute of Physics (http://www.aip.org/pubservs/style/4thed/toc.html).

Symbols, units, and abbreviations: Use SI units (and their standard abbreviations) and metric numbers. Symbols, acronyms, etc., should be defined on their first occurrence.

Text: The text should be single-spaced, single-column, and fully justified throughout the manuscript. All text and figures, including footnotes, must fit inside a text area 5.25 in. wide by 8.5 in. high (13.28 by 21.54 cm). Margins should be 1.0 in. (2.54 cm) on the top and 1.625 in. (4.11 cm) on the bottom, left, and right. The manuscript should not contain headers or footers.

Title page: List the paper title, full name(s) of the author(s), and complete affiliation/address for each author. Include an abstract that summarizes objectives, methodology, results, and their significance; 200 words maximum. Provide three to six keywords. List sponsorship information in an acknowledgment section at the end of the paper.

Equations: Numbered sequentially with arabic numerals in parentheses at the right margin.

References: Number references sequentially in the order in which they are cited in the text. References must not be imported using software tools such as Endnotes due to inconsistencies with reference formatting caused by the tool. In order to facilitate reference linking, authors should include the Digital Object Identifier (DOI) at the end of each reference in brackets, if a DOI is available (see examples below). A DOI is a unique alphanumeric string assigned to a digital object, such as a journal article, that provides a persistent link to its location on the internet. The use of DOIs allows readers to easily access cited articles. A free DOI lookup service is available from CrossRef at either http://www.crossref.org/guestquery/ (for single references) or http://www.crossref.org/freeTextQuery/ (for multiple references). Authors may also be able to obtain DOIs from the source article in many cases. Use these basic formats.

Footnotes: Use textual footnotes only when necessary to present important documentary or explanatory material whose inclusion in the text would be distracting.

Figures: Number all figures in the order that they appear in text. All figure parts should be labeled (a), (b), etc. Figures should be placed as closely as possible to the first instance where the figure is called out in the text.

Tables: Number all tables in the order that they appear in text. Tables should be placed as closely as possible to the first instance where the table is called out in the text.

Color figures: Since JARS is an online-only journal, there is no charge for publishing color figures.

Biographies: A brief professional biography not to exceed 150 words should be provided for each author, if available. Biographies should be placed at the end of the paper, after the references. Personal information such as hobbies or birthplace/birthdate should not be included. (Note that biographies should not be included for rapid-publication Letters).

JARS Letters: The purpose of this section of the Journal of Applied Remote Sensing (JARS) is to provide rapid publication of short technical communications of significant interest in the field of nanophotonics. Submissions should be prepared in the same manner as a regular paper, except that there are no author biographies. The manuscript length may not exceed six pages. A brief cover letter setting forth the significance of the paper must accompany the manuscript. Accepted letters will be published as open-access articles and will also be part of the SPIE Letters Virtual Journal. Regular page charges apply to letters.

Commentaries: A Commentary should be based primarily on research in the past two to three years. It should be written at a level accessible to readers who are not researchers themselves but who are interested in research. The number of authors must not exceed two. The total number of words should be between 900 and 1500. There can be one or two small illustrations, and no more than 10 references. No abstract is needed. A Commentary should begin with a paragraph conveying a sense of immediacy, and end with specific proposals for research in the next few years. Commentaries will be solicited by the Editor-in-Chief.

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Multimedia

Multimedia files must be submitted as an integral part of the paper. Supplemental multimedia material is not accepted. 

Video Submissions:

Acceptable file formats include:

  • QuickTime nonstreaming video (.qt or .mov)
  • MPEG (.mpg)

The acceptable file formats outlined above are playable using standard media players such as QuickTime and Windows Media Player. Media players should be used to check file properties and image/sound quality prior to submission.

Authors must create a representative "still" image taken from the video. This still image will be used as a static representation of the video file, which will be linked by the publisher after acceptance. Care should be taken to extract an image from the video which has reasonable clarity of fine lines and details.

Still images should be embedded as figures in the paper. A caption or description of the content of the video file is required, similar to a typical figure caption. Number all multimedia files in the order in which they are referred to in the text, e.g., Video 1, Video 2, etc. The multimedia file type (e.g., QuickTime, MPEG, etc.) and file size should be included in parentheses at the end of hte caption, e.g., (MPEG, 2.5 MB).

A recommended maximum size for each video file is 10-12 MB.

 


Editorial Board

Editor-in-Chief

Wei Gao (bio)
Colorado State University
Natural Resource Ecology Laboratory
USDA UV-B Monitoring and
Research Program
USA

Senior Regional Editors

Harold Annegarn (bio)
University of the Witwatersrand
Africa

Paul R. Houser (bio)
George Mason University
North America

Hung-Lung Allen Huang (bio)
University of Wisconsin-Madison
North America

K. Dieter Klaes (bio)
European Organization for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites (EUMETSAT)
Europe

Qingxi Tong (bio)
Beijing University
Asia

Associate Editors

Martha C. Anderson (bio)
USDA-ARS Hydrology and Remote Sensing Laboratory
USA

Philip E. Ardanuy (bio)
Raytheon Information Solutions
USA

Hal J. Bloom (bio)
NPOESS Integrated Program Office
USA

Vittorio E. Brando (bio)
CSIRO Land & Water
Australia

Ni-Bin Chang (bio)
University of Central Florida
USA

Jing Ming Chen (bio)
University of Toronto
Canada

Allen Chu (bio)
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
USA

Andrew D. Collard (bio)
European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts
United Kingdom

Adolfo Comeron (bio)
Univ. Polit猫cnica de Catalunya
Spain

Rebecca L. Dodge (bio)
Midwestern State University
USA

Robert Frouin (bio)
Scripps Institution of Oceanography
USA

William B. Gail (bio)
Microsoft Virtual Earth
USA

Marco Gianinetto (bio)
Politecnico di Milano University
Italy

Mitchell D. Goldberg
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
USA

John Gonglewski (bio)
Air Force Research Lab
USA

Xingfa Gu
Institute of Remote Sensing Application, Chinese Academy of Sciences
China

Huadong Guo (bio)
Chinese Academy of Sciences
China

Thomas Jackson (bio)
U.S. Department of Agriculture
USA

Nicole Jacquinet (bio)
Ecole Polytechnique
France

Philippe Keckhut (bio)
University Versailles Saint-Quentin
France

Rick Lawrence (bio)
Montana State University
USA

Michael Lefsky
Colorado State University
USA

John F. Le Marshall
Joint Center for Satellite Data Assimilation
USA

Elizabeth M. Middleton (bio)
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center
USA

Manfred Owe
National Aeronautics and Space Administration
USA

Gelsomina Pappalardo (bio)
Institute of Methodologies for Environmental Analysis
Italy

Stuart Phinn (bio)
University of Queensland
Australia

Jeffery J. Puschell (bio)
Raytheon Space and Airborne Systems
USA

John J. Qu (bio)
George Mason University
USA

Gilbert Rochon (bio)
Purdue University
USA

Klaus Schaefer (bio)
Forschungszentrum Karlsruhe GmbH
Germany

Upendra N. Singh (bio)
NASA Langley Research Center
USA

Ramesh Sivanpillai (bio)
University of Wyoming
USA

Elisabeth Weisz (bio)
University of Wisconsin-Madison
USA

Xiong Xiaoxiong (bio)
NASA
USA

Wenjian Zhang
World Meterological Organization, Observing and Information Systems (OBS) Department
Switzerland

Xiaolei Zou (bio)
Florida State University
USA



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