Prof. Noam Levin

Noam Levin is a full professor in the Department of Geography and heads the Remote Sensing Laboratory. His main areas of interest are landscape changes, light pollution, wildfires, human-environment relations, nature conservation planning and aeolian geomorphology, and he investigates them using remote sensing and geographic information systems (GIS) tools. He specializes in applying tools of spatial analysis to understand the effects of climate change and changes in human activity on natural systems at different scales. His current research topics include, among other things, remote sensing of night lights as a tool for studying human activity and light pollution, studying landscape changes in Israel using historical maps and satellite images, studies on the wildfires in Israel, and nature conservation planning. These works appeared in more than 120 articles in international peer-reviewed journals.


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ResearcherID:D-2180-2013
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