Spatially Continuous and High-resolution Land Surface Temperature: A Review of Reconstruction and Spatiotemporal Fusion Techniques
Penghai Wu, Zhixiang Yin, Chao Zeng, Sibo Duan, Frank-Michael, Gottsche, Xiaoshaung Ma, Xinghua Li, Hui Yang, Huanfeng Shen

TL;DR
This review paper summarizes recent methods for reconstructing and fusing land surface temperature data to achieve high spatial and temporal resolution, addressing challenges like atmospheric interference and sensor limitations.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive overview of existing LST reconstruction and spatiotemporal fusion techniques, highlighting their principles, algorithms, and future research directions.
Findings
Summarized three types of reconstruction methods for missing pixels.
Reviewed two approaches for cloudy pixel reconstruction.
Categorized three main spatiotemporal fusion methods.
Abstract
Remotely sensed, spatially continuous and high spatiotemporal resolution (hereafter referred to as high resolution) land surface temperature (LST) is a key parameter for studying the thermal environment and has important applications in many fields. However, difficult atmospheric conditions, sensor malfunctioning and scanning gaps between orbits frequently introduce spatial discontinuities into satellite-retri1eved LST products. For a single sensor, there is also a trade-off between temporal and spatial resolution and, therefore, it is impossible to obtain high temporal and spatial resolution simultaneously. In recent years the reconstruction and spatiotemporal fusion of LST products have become active research topics that aim at overcoming this limitation. They are two of most investigated approaches in thermal remote sensing and attract increasing attention, which has resulted in a…
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