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Enhancements to the Open Access Spectral Band Adjustment Factor Online Calculation Tool for Visible ChannelsWith close to 40 years of satellite observations, from which, cloud, land-use, and aerosol parameters can be measured, inter-consistent calibrations are needed to normalize retrievals across satellite records. Various visible-sensor inter-calibration techniques have been developed that utilize radiometrically stable Earth targets, e.g., deep convective clouds and desert/polar ice pseudo-invariant calibration sites. Other equally effective, direct techniques for intercalibration between satellite imagers are simultaneous nadir overpass comparisons and ray-matched radiance pairs. Combining independent calibration results from such varied techniques yields robust calibration coefficients, and is a form of self-validation. One potential source of significant error when cross-calibrating satellite sensors, however, are the often small but substantial spectral discrepancies between comparable bands, which must be accounted for. As such, visible calibration methods rely on a Spectral Band Adjustment Factor (SBAF) to account for the spectral-response function- induced radiance differences between analogous imagers. The SBAF is unique to each calibration method as it is a function of the Earth-reflected spectra. In recent years, NASA Langley pioneered the use of SCIAMACHY-, GOME-2-, and Hyperion-retrieved Earth spectra to compute SBAFs. By carefully selecting hyperspectral footprints that best represent the conditions inherent to an inter-calibration technique, the uncertainty in the SBAF is greatly reduced. NASA Langley initially provided the Global Space-based Inter-calibration System processing and research centers with online SBAF tools, with which users select conditions to best match their calibration criteria. This article highlights expanded SBAF tool capabilities for visible wavelengths, with emphasis on the use of the spectral range filtering for the purpose of separating scene conditions for the channel that the SBAF is needed based on the reflectance values of other bands. In other words, spectral filtering will enable better scene-type selection for bands where scene determination is difficult without information from other channels, which should prove valuable to users in the calibration community.


Document ID
20200002551
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Scarino, Benjamin
(Science Systems and Applications, Inc. (SSAI) Hampton, VA, United States)
Doelling, David R.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, VA, United States)
Gopalan, Arun
(Science Systems and Applications, Inc. (SSAI) Hampton, VA, United States)
Chee, Thad
(Science Systems and Applications, Inc. (SSAI) Hampton, VA, United States)
Bhatt, Rajendra
(Science Systems and Applications, Inc. (SSAI) Hampton, VA, United States)
Haney, Conor
(Science Systems and Applications, Inc. (SSAI) Hampton, VA, United States)
Date Acquired
April 17, 2020
Publication Date
August 19, 2018
Subject Category
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Report/Patent Number
NF1676L-29368
Report Number: NF1676L-29368
Meeting Information
Meeting: SPIE Optics + Photonics 2018
Location: San Diego, CA
Country: United States
Start Date: August 19, 2018
End Date: August 23, 2018
Sponsors: International Society for Optical Engineering
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 281945.02.04.01.75
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Public Use Permitted.
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