Proceedings

Find matching any: Reset
Privette, C.V
Hansen, N
Add filter to result:
Authors
Khalilian, A
Qiao, X
Payero, J.O
Maja, J.M
Privette, C.V
Han, Y.J
Turner, I
Kerry, R
Jensen, R
Woolley, E
Hansen, N
Hopkins, B
Kerry, R
Shumate, S
Ingram, B
Hammond, K
Gunther, D
Jensen, R
Schill, S
Hansen, N
Hopkins, B
Topics
Remote Sensing Applications in Precision Agriculture
Drainage Optimization and Variable Rate Irrigation
Type
Oral
Year
2016
2022
Home » Authors » Results

Authors

Filter results3 paper(s) found.

1. Utilizing Space-based Technology for Cotton Irrigation Scheduling

Accurate soil moisture content measurements are vital to precision irrigation management. Electromagnetic sensors such as capacitance and time domain reflectometry have been widely used for measuring soil moisture content for decades. However, to estimate average soil moisture content over a large area, a number of ground-based in-situ sensors would need to be installed, which would be expensive and labor intensive. Remote sensing using the microwave spectrum (such as GPS signals) has been used... A. Khalilian, X. Qiao, J.O. Payero, J.M. Maja, C.V. Privette, Y.J. Han

2. Investigation of Automated Analysis of Snowmelt from Time-series Sentinel 2 Imagery to Inform Spatial Patterns of Spring Soil Moisture in the American Mountain West

Variable rate irrigation of crops is a promising approach for saving water whilst maintaining crop yields in the semi-arid American Mountain West – much of which is currently experiencing a mega drought. The first step in determining irrigation zones involves characterizing the patterns of spatial variation in soil moisture and determining if these are relatively stable temporally in relation to topographic features and soil texture. Characterizing variable rate irrigation zones is usually... I. Turner, R. Kerry, R. Jensen, E. Woolley, N. Hansen, B. Hopkins

3. Spatial Analysis of Soil Moisture and Turfgrass Health to Determine Zones for Spatially Variable Irrigation Management

The Western United States is currently experiencing a “Mega Drought”. This makes efficient water use more important than ever. Turfgrass is a major vegetation type in urban areas and performs many ecosystem services such as cooling through evapotranspiration, fixing carbon from the atmosphere and reducing wild-fire risk. There are now more acres of irrigated turfgrass (>40 million) in the USA than irrigated corn, wheat and fruit trees combined (Milesi et al., 2005). It has been... R. Kerry, S. Shumate, B. Ingram, K. Hammond, D. Gunther, R. Jensen, S. Schill, N. Hansen, B. Hopkins