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The Radiometric Stability and Scaling of Collection 6 Terra- and Aqua-MODIS VIS, NIR, and SWIR Spectral Bands
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Calibration Team has recently released the Collection 6 (C6) radiances, which offer broad improvements over Collection 5 (C5). The recharacterization of the solar diffuser, lunar measurements, and scan mirror angle corrections removed most of the visible channel calibration drifts. The visible band calibration stability was validated over the Libyan Desert, Dome-C, and deep convective cloud (DCC) invariant Earth targets, for wavelengths less than 1 μm. The lifetime stability of Terra and Aqua C6 is both within 1%, whereas the Terra C5 degradation exceeded 2% for most visible bands. The MODIS lifetime radiance trends over the invariant targets are mostly within 1%; however, the band-specific target fluctuations are inconsistent, which suggests that the stability limits of the invariant targets have been reached. Based on Terra- and Aqua-MODIS nearly simultaneous nadir overpass (NSNO) radiance comparisons, the Terra and Aqua C6 calibration shows agreement within 1.2%, whereas the C5 calibration exceeds 2%. Because the MODIS instruments are alike, the same NSNOs are used to radiometrically scale the Terra radiances to Aqua. For most visible bands, the Terra-scaled and Aqua C6 radiances are consistent to within 0.5% over Dome-C, DCC, and for geostationary visible imagers having similar spectral response functions, which are used as transfer radiometers. For bands greater than 1 μm, only minor calibration adjustments were made, and the C6 calibration is stable within 1% based on Libya-4.
The Radiometric Stability and Scaling of Collection 6 Terra- and Aqua-MODIS VIS, NIR, and SWIR Spectral Bands
The Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) Calibration Team has recently released the Collection 6 (C6) radiances, which offer broad improvements over Collection 5 (C5). The recharacterization of the solar diffuser, lunar measurements, and scan mirror angle corrections removed most of the visible channel calibration drifts. The visible band calibration stability was validated over the Libyan Desert, Dome-C, and deep convective cloud (DCC) invariant Earth targets, for wavelengths less than 1 μm. The lifetime stability of Terra and Aqua C6 is both within 1%, whereas the Terra C5 degradation exceeded 2% for most visible bands. The MODIS lifetime radiance trends over the invariant targets are mostly within 1%; however, the band-specific target fluctuations are inconsistent, which suggests that the stability limits of the invariant targets have been reached. Based on Terra- and Aqua-MODIS nearly simultaneous nadir overpass (NSNO) radiance comparisons, the Terra and Aqua C6 calibration shows agreement within 1.2%, whereas the C5 calibration exceeds 2%. Because the MODIS instruments are alike, the same NSNOs are used to radiometrically scale the Terra radiances to Aqua. For most visible bands, the Terra-scaled and Aqua C6 radiances are consistent to within 0.5% over Dome-C, DCC, and for geostationary visible imagers having similar spectral response functions, which are used as transfer radiometers. For bands greater than 1 μm, only minor calibration adjustments were made, and the C6 calibration is stable within 1% based on Libya-4.
The Radiometric Stability and Scaling of Collection 6 Terra- and Aqua-MODIS VIS, NIR, and SWIR Spectral Bands
Doelling, David R (author) / Aisheng Wu / Xiaoxiong Xiong / Scarino, Benjamin R / Bhatt, Rajendra / Haney, Conor O / Morstad, Daniel / Gopalan, Arun
2015
Article (Journal)
English
Local classification TIB:
770/3710/5670
BKL:
38.03
Methoden und Techniken der Geowissenschaften
/
74.41
Luftaufnahmen, Photogrammetrie
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