DocumentCode
2093845
Title
Initial flight test results from the EO-1 Advanced Land Imager: radiometric performance
Author
Mendenhall, J.A. ; Hearn, D.R. ; Evans, J.B. ; Lencioni, D.E. ; Digenis, C.J. ; Welsh, R.D.
Author_Institution
Lincoln Lab., MIT, Lexington, MA, USA
Volume
1
fYear
2001
fDate
2001
Firstpage
515
Abstract
The Advanced Land Imager (ALI) is one of three instruments flown on the first Earth Observing mission (EO-1) under NASA´s New Millennium Program (NMP). The primary NMP mission objective is to flight-validate advanced technologies that will enable dramatic improvements in performance, cost, mass and schedule for future, Landsat-like, Earth remote sensing instruments. ALI contains a number of innovative features, including all the Category 1 technology demonstrations of the EO-1 mission. These include the basic instrument architecture which employs a push-broom data collection mode, a wide field of view optical design, compact multispectral detector arrays, non-cryogenic HgCdTe for the short wave infrared bands, silicon carbide optics and a multi-level solar calibration technique. The Earth Observing-1 spacecraft was successfully launched on November 21, 2000. During the first sixty days on orbit, several Earth scenes were collected and on-orbit calibration techniques were exercised by the Advanced Land Imager. This paper presents the status of ALI radiometric performance characterization obtained from the data collected during that period
Keywords
geophysical equipment; geophysical techniques; terrain mapping; 350 to 1000 nm; ALI; Advanced Land Imager; EO-1; Earth Observing mission; Earth Observing-1; HgCdTe; IR; SiC; geophysical measurement technique; infrared; instrument; land surface; multispectral detector arrays; optical design; optical imaging; push-broom data collection; radiometric performance; satellite remote sensing; terrain mapping; visible; wide field of view; Calibration; Costs; Earth; Infrared detectors; Instruments; Optical arrays; Remote sensing; Satellites; Space technology; Testing;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2001. IGARSS '01. IEEE 2001 International
Conference_Location
Sydney, NSW
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7031-7
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/IGARSS.2001.976207
Filename
976207
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