DocumentCode
31604
Title
Prelaunch Radiometric Calibration of the HIRDLS Flight Instrument: Results and Use in On-Orbit Data Processing
Author
Eden, Thomas ; Gille, Johan ; Barnett, Julie ; Hepplewhite, Chris ; Whitney, John ; Arter, Phil ; Peters, Daniel M. ; Watkins, Robert E. J.
Author_Institution
Lab. for Atmos. & Space Phys., Univ. of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA
Volume
52
Issue
11
fYear
2014
fDate
Nov. 2014
Firstpage
7059
Lastpage
7072
Abstract
Results from the prelaunch radiometric calibration of the 21-channel High Resolution Dynamics Limb Sounder (HIRDLS) flight instrument are presented. The calibration was carried out in the Department of Physics of Oxford University. Two large aperture external blackbody cavities were used to generate stable radiances at target temperatures between ~90 and ~320 K. These blackbodies were located, along with the HIRDLS instrument, inside a large vacuum chamber. Data were taken at three different focal-plane temperatures (~61, ~66, and ~71 K). To complicate matters beyond the initial scope of the prelaunch calibration, a failure of some contamination close-out material (Kapton) that lined the inner fore-optics cavity occurred during launch, which made the original in-flight radiometric calibration procedure impossible. Accordingly, the radiometric conversion algorithm had to be changed, requiring more information from prelaunch calibration to be used than first envisioned. This paper discusses a variety of details, such as data-taking procedures, analysis methodology, associated error analyses, and necessary changes to the radiometric conversion algorithm needed for inflight data processing.
Keywords
aircraft instrumentation; blackbody radiation; brightness; calibration; contamination; focal planes; measurement errors; radiometers; remote sensing; temperature sensors; HIRDLS flight instrument; blackbody cavity; close out material contamination; error analyses; focal plane temperature; fore-optics cavity; high resolution dynamics limb sounder; in-flight data processing; in-flight radiometric calibration procedure; on-orbit data processing; prelaunch radiometric calibration; radiance generation; radiometric conversion algorithm; vacuum chamber; Atmospheric measurements; Calibration; Detectors; Instruments; Mirrors; Radiometry; Temperature measurement; Blackbody; filtered radiometer; radiometric; remote sensing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0196-2892
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/TGRS.2014.2306993
Filename
6766201
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