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Extending Aquatic Spectral Information with the First Radiometric IR-B Field ObservationsPlanetary radiometric observations enable remote sensing of biogeochemical parameters to describe spatiotemporal variability in aquatic ecosystems. For approximately the last half century, the science of aquatic radiometry has established a knowledge base using primarily, but not exclusively, visible wavelengths. Scientific subdisciplines supporting aquatic radiometry have evolved hardware, software, and procedures to maximize competency for exploiting visible wavelength information. This perspective culminates with the science requirement that visible spectral resolution must be continually increased to extract more information. Other sources of information, meanwhile, remain underexploited, particularly information from nonvisible wavelengths. Herein, absolute radiometry is used to evaluate spectral limits for deriving and exploiting aquatic data products, specifically the normalized water-leaving radiance, Γ(λ)⁠, and its derivative products. Radiometric observations presented herein are quality assured for individual wavebands, and spectral verification is conducted by analyzing celestial radiometric results, comparing agreement of above- and in-water observations at applicable wavelengths, and evaluating consistency with bio-optical models and optical theory. The results presented include the first absolute radiometric field observations of Γ(λ) within the IR-B spectral domain (i.e. spanning 1400–3000 nm), which indicate that IR-B signals confer greater and more variable flux than formerly ascribed. Black-pixel processing, a routine correction in satellite and in situ aquatic radiometry wherein a spectrum is offset corrected relative to a nonvisible waveband (often IR-B or a shorter legacy waveband) set to a null value, is shown to degrade aquatic spectra and derived biogeochemical parameters.
Document ID
20230016088
Acquisition Source
Goddard Space Flight Center
Document Type
Reprint (Version printed in journal)
Authors
Henry F Houskeeper ORCID
(Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution Falmouth, Massachusetts, United States)
Stanford B Hooker
(Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt, Maryland, United States)
Date Acquired
November 6, 2023
Publication Date
October 14, 2023
Publication Information
Publication: PNAS Nexus
Publisher: Oxford University Press (United Kingdom)
Volume: 2
Issue: 11
Issue Publication Date: November 1, 2023
e-ISSN: 2752-6542
Subject Category
Earth Resources and Remote Sensing
Optics
Funding Number(s)
WBS: 388496
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Portions of document may include copyright protected material.
Technical Review
External Peer Committee
Keywords
aquatic optics
absolute radiometry
black-pixel
IR-B
shortwave infrared (SWIR)
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