20 research outputs found

    Analysis and Design of a Portal for Ionospheric Data

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    Since 2004 DLR Neustrelitz operates the Space Weather Application Center – Ionosphere (SWACI). This Center is involved in several projects of the Space Situational Awareness (SSA) program of ESA and of EU FP7. It is largely based on services and tools of DLR’s Data and Information Management System (DIMS) and its long-standing User interface EoWEB. SWACI provides access to near real time products and ensures long-term preservation. The lecture will analyze the existing solution and various project-specific applications and will derive requirements for a recent user interface. In the second part the talk will draw a design of an user interface for the Ionospheric Monitoring and Prediction Center (IMPC), which continues utilizing existing services of DLR, offers OGC compliant interfaces and which is so generalized that future projects can be easily plugged in

    The Spaceborne Imaging Spectrometer DESIS: Mission summary and potential for scientific developments

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    The DLR Earth Sensing Imaging Spectrometer (DESIS) is a spaceborne instrument installed and operated on the International Space Station (ISS). The German Aerospace Center (DLR) has developed the instrument and the full pre-processing chain up to L2A, while the US company Teledyne Brown Engineering (TBE) provided the Multi-User System for Earth Sensing (MUSES) platform and the infrastructure for operations and data tasking. DESIS is equipped with an on-board calibration unit and a rotating pointing mirror (POI). The POI can change the line of sight in the forward/backward direction (independently of the MUSES orientation), allowing the observation of the same area with different pointing angles within an overflight. About four years after the mission’s kick-off, the DESIS spectrometer was integrated into MUSES in August 2018, marking the start of the commissioning phase. The DESIS on-orbit functional tests were successful, and the DLR-built processing chain installed at DLR for scientific users and at Amazon Web Service for commercial users started to generate operational L1B, L1C and L2A DESIS products. In October 2019 the operational phase started the distribution of the data to scientific and commercial users. Since then, the instrument performance has been constantly evaluated. In a continuous monitoring process, the data quality is controlled and, if necessary, the calibration algorithms and tables are adjusted. This is essential for the later data application by scientists. In particular, the monitoring approaches emphasize the need for high and consistent data quality over long time periods. In autumn 2021, the first DESIS user workshop demonstrated the widespread use of DESIS data for topics like water and terrestrial resource monitoring, biodiversity and forest management. This presentation will give an overview of the DESIS mission, data quality, data access, and provides examples and perspectives on the scientific exploitation of the mission. The contribution for the CHIME mission is presented exemplarily for the CHIME test sites that are constantly observed by DESIS since 2020. DESIS data acquisition opportunities rely on the non-sun-synchronous ISS orbit, resulting in observation and illumination conditions difficult to reproduce. On the other hand, DESIS time series contain images of different day times, sensor incident angles as well as sun zenith angles and thus, can open up new opportunities for the monitoring of Earth system processes that have a daily variability such as photosynthesis. Finally, DESIS multitemporal data stacks can be an essential data base for algorithm and operational processor developments that shall be able to handle massive data amounts. The DESIS data archive is open for such research and developments and thus, is a valuable imaging spectroscopy data source

    The Spaceborne Imaging Spectrometer DESIS: Data Access and Scientific Applications

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    The DLR Earth Sensing Imaging Spectrometer (DESIS) is a space-based instrument installed and operated on the International Space Station (ISS). This space mission is the achievement of the collaboration between the German Aerospace Center (DLR) and the US company Teledyne Brown Engineering (TBE). DLR has developed the instrument and the software for data processing, while TBE provides the Multi-User System for Earth Sensing (MUSES) platform, where DESIS is installed, and the infrastructure for operation and data tasking

    The EnMAP imaging spectroscopy mission towards operations

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    EnMAP (Environmental Mapping and Analysis Program) is a high-resolution imaging spectroscopy remote sensing mission that was successfully launched on April 1st, 2022. Equipped with a prism-based dual-spectrometer, EnMAP performs observations in the spectral range between 418.2nm and 2445.5nm with 224 bands and a high radiometric and spectral accuracy and stability. EnMAP products, with a ground instantaneous field-of-view of 30m×30m at a swath width of 30km, allow for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of surface variables from frequently and consistently acquired observations on a global scale. This article presents the EnMAP mission and details the activities and results of the Launch and Early Orbit and Commissioning Phases until November 1st, 2022. The mission capabilities and expected performances for the operational Routine Phase are provided for existing and future EnMAP users

    The EnMAP imaging spectroscopy mission towards operations

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    EnMAP (Environmental Mapping and Analysis Program) is a high-resolution imaging spectroscopy remote sensing mission that was successfully launched on April 1st, 2022. Equipped with a prism-based dual-spectrometer, EnMAP performs observations in the spectral range between 418.2 nm and 2445.5 nm with 224 bands and a high radiometric and spectral accuracy and stability. EnMAP products, with a ground instantaneous field-of-view of 30 m x 30 m at a swath width of 30 km, allow for the qualitative and quantitative analysis of surface variables from frequently and consistently acquired observations on a global scale. This article presents the EnMAP mission and details the activities and results of the Launch and Early Orbit and Commissioning Phases until November 1st, 2022. The mission capabilities and expected performances for the operational Routine Phase are provided for existing and future EnMAP users

    The Generalized Processing Chain for BIRD and FireBIRD Mission

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    The FireBIRD mission has been designed to detect and monitor dynamic high temperature events, such as wild fires or volcano eruptions. In order to provide calibrated and geo-referenced data in near real time to users, a ground processing system is going to be established and deployed in the downstream chain in the national ground segment in Neustrelitz. The ground processing system consists of the Payload System Management (PSM) and one or more Instrument Processing Facility (IPFs). Due to the experimental nature of small satellite missions the components of the ground system have been often specific solutions. The design of the FireBIRD ground segment uses a modular design with separate control and payload data interfaces. For data interfaces abstract data descriptions are used in order to achieve a mission independent design to a large extend. A design constraint is to separate processing control components from data processing components as far as possible. The goal is to achieve extendibility and reusability of the processing components as well as portability of the IPF to other systems and migration for future missions

    Management and Long Term Archiving of Remote Sensing and In-situ Data at DFD - Status and Trends

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    Within the last few years the situation of satellite and airborne supported remote sensing has changed fundamentally. The reasons can be explained among others by the following aspects: • technical and technological developments and factors, such as the increase of the number of earth observation missions (e.g. multiple satellite missions on different or on one orbit), new advanced sensor technologies (e.g. SAR- and hyperspectral sensors of high spatial resolution), new storage media and storage technologies, and new improved data processing (e.g. automated interpretation algorithms and processing chains), • market-oriented aspects (e.g. private remote sensing missions, such as QuickBird or RapidEye). In addition to this the development was politically forced by European Union (EU) and European Space Agency (ESA) having established the program "Global monitoring for environment and Security" (COPERNICUS; erstwhile called GMES), which serves the development of an operative European Earth observation satellite fleet to combine earth observation monitoring with airborne remote sensing supported by terrestrial, maritime in-situ-measuring networks and additional data sources in operative process chains as well as services. Besides the continuous provisioning of user friendly and reliable earth observation services e.g. to climate protection, for ecological survey, humanitarian assistance or for the reply to security-relevant questions the COPERNICUS initiative is aimed at the establishment of a European market for innovative remote sensing based services. TERrestrial ENvironmental Observatories (TERENO) - Initiative of the Helmholtz community, operates on a temporal and spatial scale that make i.) integration of remote sensing technologies and ii.) the combination of these technologies with in-situ-measurement technologies urgently needed. Both aspects require an advanced management and archiving design including appropriate technology and technological infrastructure to ensure a reliable long-term archiving. In the lecture, the DFD will present its solution the Data and Information Management System (DIMS) including its experience in archiving large data-massive. For a data provision to solute scientific questions in distant future additional aspects will be considered like data curation and interoperability in a service oriented environment

    Data Management and Long Term Archiving of remote Sensing and In-situ Data at DFD - Status and Trends

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    Aktueller Stand und Ausblick auf die Langzeitarchivierung von Satellitendaten zur Erdbeobachtung und In-situ Daten im NRSDA (National Remote Sensing Data Archiv
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