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K. V. S. Badarinath

Researcher at National Remote Sensing Centre

Publications -  148
Citations -  5857

K. V. S. Badarinath is an academic researcher from National Remote Sensing Centre. The author has contributed to research in topics: Aerosol & Angstrom exponent. The author has an hindex of 40, co-authored 148 publications receiving 4930 citations. Previous affiliations of K. V. S. Badarinath include Department of Space & Remote Sensing Center.

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Journal Article

Agriculture crop residue burning in the Indo-Gangetic Plains - : A study using IRS-P6 AWiFS satellite data

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provided an account of the agriculture crop residue burning in Punjab during wheat and rice crop growing periods, and the potential of satellite remote sensing datasets for burnt area estimation and GHG emissions, is also demonstrated in the study.
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Long-range transport of aerosols from agriculture crop residue burning in Indo-Gangetic Plains—A study using LIDAR, ground measurements and satellite data

TL;DR: In this paper, Synchronous measurements using micro-pulsed lidar, MICROTOPS-II sun photometer, multi-filter rotating shadow band radiometer (MFRSR) on aerosol optical depth and ground reaching solar irradiance were carried at an urban location in central region of India.
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Impact of agriculture crop residue burning on atmospheric aerosol loading – a study over Punjab State, India

TL;DR: In this article, the impact of agriculture crop residue burning on aerosol properties during October 2006 and 2007 over Punjab State, India using ground-based measurements and multi-satellite data was examined.
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Spatial distribution of aerosol black carbon over India during pre-monsoon season

TL;DR: Aerosol black carbon (BC) mass concentrations measured continuously during a multi-platform field experiment, Integrated Campaign for Aerosols gases and Radiation Budget (ICARB, March-May 2006), from a network of eight observatories spread over geographically distinct environments of India, (which included five mainland stations, one highland station, and two island stations (one each ill Arabian Sea and Bay of Bengal)) are examined for their spatio-temporal characteristics as mentioned in this paper.