The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission produced the most complete, highest-resolution digital elevation model of the Earth. The project was a joint endeavor of NASA, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the German and Italian Space Agencies and flew in February 2000. It used dual radar antennas to acquire interferometric radar data, processed to digital topographic data at 1 arc sec resolution. Details of the development, flight operations, data processing, and products are provided for users of this revolutionary data set.
%0 Journal Article
%1 g.2007shuttle
%A Farr, Tom G.
%A Rosen, Paul A.
%A Caro, Edward
%A Crippen, Robert
%A Duren, Riley
%A Hensley, Scott
%A Kobrick, Michael
%A Paller, Mimi
%A Rodriguez, Ernesto
%A Roth, Ladislav
%A Seal, David
%A Shaffer, Scott
%A Shimada, Joanne
%A Umland, Jeffrey
%A Werner, Marian
%A Oskin, Michael
%A Burbank, Douglas
%A Alsdorf, Douglas
%D 2007
%I American Geophysical Union
%J Rev. Geophys.
%K data geomorphology shuttle srtm3
%P --
%T The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission
%U http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2005RG000183
%V 45
%X The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission produced the most complete, highest-resolution digital elevation model of the Earth. The project was a joint endeavor of NASA, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the German and Italian Space Agencies and flew in February 2000. It used dual radar antennas to acquire interferometric radar data, processed to digital topographic data at 1 arc sec resolution. Details of the development, flight operations, data processing, and products are provided for users of this revolutionary data set.
@article{g.2007shuttle,
abstract = {The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission produced the most complete, highest-resolution digital elevation model of the Earth. The project was a joint endeavor of NASA, the National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency, and the German and Italian Space Agencies and flew in February 2000. It used dual radar antennas to acquire interferometric radar data, processed to digital topographic data at 1 arc sec resolution. Details of the development, flight operations, data processing, and products are provided for users of this revolutionary data set.},
added-at = {2009-11-02T17:14:17.000+0100},
author = {Farr, Tom G. and Rosen, Paul A. and Caro, Edward and Crippen, Robert and Duren, Riley and Hensley, Scott and Kobrick, Michael and Paller, Mimi and Rodriguez, Ernesto and Roth, Ladislav and Seal, David and Shaffer, Scott and Shimada, Joanne and Umland, Jeffrey and Werner, Marian and Oskin, Michael and Burbank, Douglas and Alsdorf, Douglas},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/2bcc4adbcef738dc9a26e9b00025df1b4/andreab},
description = {The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission},
interhash = {a148a653c0793fd58c696e5d98618ade},
intrahash = {bcc4adbcef738dc9a26e9b00025df1b4},
journal = {Rev. Geophys.},
keywords = {data geomorphology shuttle srtm3},
month = {#may#},
pages = {--},
publisher = {American Geophysical Union},
timestamp = {2009-11-02T17:14:17.000+0100},
title = {The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission},
url = {http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/2005RG000183},
volume = 45,
year = 2007
}