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Ocean observations with EOS/MODIS: Algorithm development and post launch studiesAn investigation of the influence of stratospheric aerosol on the performance of the atmospheric correction algorithm is nearly complete. The results indicate how the performance of the algorithm is degraded if the stratospheric aerosol is ignored. Use of the MODIS 1380 nm band to effect a correction for stratospheric aerosols was also studied. Simple algorithms such as subtracting the reflectance at 1380 nm from the visible and near infrared bands can significantly reduce the error; however, only if the diffuse transmittance of the aerosol layer is taken into account. The atmospheric correction code has been modified for use with absorbing aerosols. Tests of the code showed that, in contrast to non absorbing aerosols, the retrievals were strongly influenced by the vertical structure of the aerosol, even when the candidate aerosol set was restricted to a set appropriate to the absorbing aerosol. This will further complicate the problem of atmospheric correction in an atmosphere with strongly absorbing aerosols. Our whitecap radiometer system and solar aureole camera were both tested at sea and performed well. Investigation of a technique to remove the effects of residual instrument polarization sensitivity were initiated and applied to an instrument possessing (approx.) 3-4 times the polarization sensitivity expected for MODIS. Preliminary results suggest that for such an instrument, elimination of the polarization effect is possible at the required level of accuracy by estimating the polarization of the top-of-atmosphere radiance to be that expected for a pure Rayleigh scattering atmosphere. This may be of significance for design of a follow-on MODIS instrument. W.M. Balch participated on two month-long cruises to the Arabian sea, measuring coccolithophore abundance, production, and optical properties. A thorough understanding of the relationship between calcite abundance and light scatter, in situ, will provide the basis for a generic suspended calcite algorithm.
Document ID
19960012284
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Contractor Report (CR)
Authors
Gordon, Howard R.
(Miami Univ. Coral Gables, FL, United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
January 16, 1996
Subject Category
Oceanography
Report/Patent Number
NASA-CR-200121
NIPS-96-07891
NAS 1.26:200121
Report Number: NASA-CR-200121
Report Number: NIPS-96-07891
Report Number: NAS 1.26:200121
Accession Number
96N18521
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NAS5-31363
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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