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Hands-On Geospatial Analysis with R and QGIS

Hands-On Geospatial Analysis with R and QGIS

By : Hamson, Islam
3.3 (3)
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Hands-On Geospatial Analysis with R and QGIS

Hands-On Geospatial Analysis with R and QGIS

3.3 (3)
By: Hamson, Islam

Overview of this book

Managing spatial data has always been challenging and it's getting more complex as the size of data increases. Spatial data is actually big data and you need different tools and techniques to work your way around to model and create different workflows. R and QGIS have powerful features that can make this job easier. This book is your companion for applying machine learning algorithms on GIS and remote sensing data. You’ll start by gaining an understanding of the nature of spatial data and installing R and QGIS. Then, you’ll learn how to use different R packages to import, export, and visualize data, before doing the same in QGIS. Screenshots are included to ease your understanding. Moving on, you’ll learn about different aspects of managing and analyzing spatial data, before diving into advanced topics. You’ll create powerful data visualizations using ggplot2, ggmap, raster, and other packages of R. You’ll learn how to use QGIS 3.2.2 to visualize and manage (create, edit, and format) spatial data. Different types of spatial analysis are also covered using R. Finally, you’ll work with landslide data from Bangladesh to create a landslide susceptibility map using different machine learning algorithms. By reading this book, you’ll transition from being a beginner to an intermediate user of GIS and remote sensing data in no time.
Table of Contents (12 chapters)
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8
GRASS, Graphical Modelers, and Web Mapping

Basics of remote sensing

Remote sensing is the measurement of characteristics or objects of Earth using the reflected radiation or signals that are transmitted from a device and then reflected back to it. For the first case, when the Sun is the primary source of energy, we call this passive remote sensing. By measuring reflected Electromagnetic Radiation (EMR), we try to make sense of the remote sensing data at hand. As different objects have different reflectance across the wavelength of EMR, we can identify different objects by comparing the observed reflectance against the typical reflectance.

Basic terminologies

We'll now briefly look at the following basic terminology of remote sensing:

  • Bands: Usually, reflected...

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