Remote Sensing
Remote sensing is the science of acquiring information about the Earth's surface without direct contact — using satellites, aircraft, or drones carrying optical, thermal, radar, or multispectral sensors. In agriculture, remote sensing maps crop health, soil moisture, biomass, and yield potential at scales from whole farms to national crop forecasting.
How Remote Sensing Works
Agricultural remote sensing uses several sensor types. Optical/multispectral sensors (Sentinel-2, Landsat, PlanetScope) capture reflected light in visible + near-infrared bands and drive indices like NDVI, NDRE, and EVI. Thermal sensors measure surface temperature, revealing water stress before visible wilting. Radar (Sentinel-1, RADARSAT) penetrates clouds and measures soil moisture and crop structure. LiDAR maps canopy height and biomass. Drones (sub-10 cm resolution) fill the gap when satellite imagery is too coarse.
Free public satellite data has transformed agriculture. Sentinel-2 delivers 10-meter optical imagery every 3–5 days globally, freely downloadable; Landsat 8/9 delivers 30-meter imagery every 8–16 days; MODIS delivers daily 250-meter imagery. Commercial platforms (Planet, Maxar) sell sub-meter daily imagery for precision applications.
Typical agricultural workflows: weekly NDVI monitoring to spot stress zones, end-of-season yield-potential mapping from peak-canopy imagery, in-season disease detection from thermal and multispectral data, and historical change detection (e.g., how a field's productivity zones have shifted over 5 years). The main limitations are cloud cover (optical sensors cannot see through clouds — radar workaround available but with coarser resolution) and revisit interval (a 5-day gap during rapid crop change can miss critical windows). WiseYield integrates Sentinel-2 optical imagery with weather and soil data to deliver field-level NDVI and actionable zone recommendations automatically.
Sources
- European Space Agency (2023). Sentinel-2 mission for agricultural monitoring.
- USDA Foreign Agricultural Service. Crop Explorer (remote-sensing-based global crop monitoring).