Title :
ASTER preflight and inflight calibration and the validation of Level 2 products
Author :
Thome, K. ; Arai, K. ; Hook, Simon ; Kieffer, H. ; Lang, Harold ; Matsunaga, Tsuneo ; Ono, A. ; Palluconi, F. ; Sakuma, H. ; Slater, P. ; Takashima, T. ; Tonooka, H. ; Tsuchida, S. ; Welch, Ronald M. ; Zalewski, E.
Author_Institution :
Opt. Sci. Center, Arizona Univ., Tucson, AZ, USA
fDate :
7/1/1998 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Describes the preflight and inflight calibration approaches used for the Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER). The system is a multispectral, high-spatial resolution sensor on the Earth Observing System´s EOS-AM1 platform. Preflight calibration of ASTER uses well-characterized sources to provide calibration and preflight round-robin exercises to understand biases between the calibration sources of ASTER and other EOS sensors. These round-robins rely on well-characterized, ultra-stable radiometers. An experiment field in Yokohama, Japan, showed that the output from the source used for the visible and near-infrared (VNIR) subsystem of ASTER may be underestimated by 1.5%, but this is still within the 4% specification for the absolute, radiometric calibration of these bands. Inflight calibration will rely on vicarious techniques and onboard blackbodies and lamps. Vicarious techniques include ground-reference methods using desert and water sites. A recent joint field campaign gives confidence that these methods currently provide absolute calibration to better than 5%, and indications are that uncertainties less than the required 4% should be achievable at launch. The EOS-AM1 platform will also provide a spacecraft maneuver that will allow ASTER to see the Moon, allowing further characterization of the sensor. A method for combining the results of these independent calibration results is presented. The paper also describes the plans for validating the Level 2 data products from ASTER. These plans rely heavily upon field campaigns using methods similar to those used for the ground-reference, vicarious calibration methods
Keywords :
atmospheric techniques; calibration; geophysical techniques; oceanographic techniques; remote sensing; ASTER; Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer; EOS; EOS-AM1; Earth Observing System; IR method; Level 2 products; VNIR; atmosphere; geophysical measurement technique; inflight calibration; infrared radiometry; land surface; meteorology; multispectral remote sensing; ocean; preflight calibration; satellite remote sensing; terrain mapping; validation; visible and near-infrared; Calibration; Earth Observing System; Lamps; Moon; Radiometry; Reflection; Sensor phenomena and characterization; Sensor systems; Space vehicles; Uncertainty;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on