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JACIE Radiometric Assessment of QuickBird Multispectral ImageryRadiometric calibration of commercial imaging satellite products is required to ensure that science and application communities can place confidence in the imagery they use and can fully understand its properties. Inaccurate radiometric calibrations can lead to erroneous decisions and invalid conclusions and can limit intercomparisons with other systems. To address this calibration need, the NASA Stennis Space Center (SSC) Earth Science Applications (ESA) directorate,through the Joint Agency for Commercial Imagery Evaluation (JACIE) framework, established a commercial imaging satellite radiometric calibration team consisting of two groups: 1) NASA SSC ESA, supported by South Dakota State University, and 2) the University of Arizona Remote Sensing Group. The two groups determined the absolute radiometric calibration coefficients of the Digital Globe 4-band, 2.4-m QuickBird multispectral product covering the visible through near-infrared spectral region. For a 2-year period beginning in 2002, both groups employed some variant of a reflectance-based vicarious calibration approach, which required ground-based measurements coincident with QuickBird image acquisitions and radiative transfer calculations. The groups chose several study sites throughout the United States that covered nearly the entire dynamic range of the QuickBird sensor. QuickBird at-sensor radiance values were compared with those estimated by the two independent groups to determine the QuickBird sensor's radiometric accuracy. Approximately 20 at-sensor radiance estimates were vicariously determined each year. The estimates were combined to provide a high-precision radiometric gain calibration coefficient. The results of this evaluation provide the user community with an independent assessment of the QuickBird sensor's absolute calibration and stability over the 2-year period. While the techniques and method described reflect those developed at the NASA SSC, the results of both JACIE team groups are included in this paper.
Document ID
20040129719
Acquisition Source
Stennis Space Center
Document Type
Preprint (Draft being sent to journal)
Authors
Pagnutti, Mary
(Lockheed Martin Space Operations Bay Saint Louis, MS, United States)
Carver, David
(Lockheed Martin Space Operations Bay Saint Louis, MS, United States)
Holekamp, Kara
(Lockheed Martin Space Operations Bay Saint Louis, MS, United States)
Knowlton, Kelly
(Lockheed Martin Space Operations Bay Saint Louis, MS, United States)
Ryan, Robert
(Lockheed Martin Space Operations Bay Saint Louis, MS, United States)
Zanoni, Vicki
(NASA Stennis Space Center Stennis Space Center, MS, United States)
Thome, Kurtis
(Arizona Univ. AZ, United States)
Aaron, David
(South Dakota State Univ. Brookings, SD, United States)
Date Acquired
August 22, 2013
Publication Date
May 7, 2004
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
SSTI-2220-0011-ESAD
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS13-650
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.

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