2,345 research outputs found

    Initial Investigation of the Angular Dependence of the NOAA-20 VIIRS Solar Diffuser BRDF Change Factor

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    The NOAA-20 (formerly the Joint Polar Satellite System-1) satellite was launched on November 18, 2017. One of the five scientific instruments aboard the NOAA-20 satellite (N20) is the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS). The VIIRS scans the earth surface in 22 spectral bands, of which 14 are denoted as the reflective solar bands (RSBs) with design band central wavelengths from 412 to 2250 nm. The VIIRS regularly performs on-orbit radiometric calibration of its RSBs, primarily through observations of an onboard sunlit solar diffuser (SD). The on-orbit change of the SD bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) value, denoted as the H-factor, is determined by an onboard solar diffuser stability monitor (SDSM). We have shown that the H-factor for the SD on the VIIRS instrument on the Suomi National Polar-orbiting Partnership (SNPP) satellite is both incident and outgoing sunlight direction dependent. This angular dependence profoundly affects the on-orbit radiometric calibration process and results. Here, we give preliminary results for the angular dependence for the N20 VIIRS SD H-factor, and compare the dependence with that for the SNPP VIIRS

    Initial Determination of the NOAA-20 VIIRS Screen Transmittances with Both Yaw Maneuver and Regular on Orbit Data

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    One of the scientific instruments aboard the NOAA-20 satellite is the Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS). The VIIRS regularly performs on-orbit radiometric calibration of its reflective solar bands, primarily through observations of an onboard sunlit solar diffuser (SD). The incident sunlight passes through an attenuation screen (the SD screen) and scatters off the SD to provide a radiance source for the calibration. The on-orbit change of the SD bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF), denoted as the H-factor, is determined by an onboard solar diffuser stability monitor (SDSM). The eight SDSM detectors observe the sun through another attenuation screen (the SDSM screen) and the sunlit SD almost at the same time to measures the SD BRDF change. The products of the SD screen transmittance and the BRDF at t=0 and the SDSM screen transmittance were measured prelaunch. Large undulations in the H-factor were seen when using the prelaunch screen transmittances. Fifteen on-orbit yaw maneuvers were performed to validate and to further characterize the screens. Although significantly improved, the H-factor from the yaw maneuver data determined screen transmittance still has undulations as large as about 0.7-0.8%, revealing that the angular step size of the yaw maneuvers is too large. In this paper, we add regular on-orbit data to the yaw maneuver data to further improve the relative products and the relative SDSM screen transmittance. The H-factor time series derived from the newly determined screen transmittance is much smoother than that derived from using only the yaw maneuver data and thus improves considerably the radiometric calibration accuracy

    Suomi NPP VIIRS DNB and RSB M Bands Detector-To-Detector and HAM Side Calibration Differences Assessment Using a Homogenous Ground Target

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    Near-nadir observations of the Libya 4 site from the S-NPP VIIRS Day-Night Band (DNB) and Moderate resolution Bands (M bands) are used to assess the detector calibration stability and half-angle mirror (HAM) side differences. Almost seven years of Sensor Data Records products are extracted from the Libya 4 site center over an area of 3232 pixels. The mean values of the radiance from individual detectors per HAM side are computed separately. The comparison of the normalized radiance between detectors indicates that the detector calibration differences are wavelength dependent and the differences have been slowly increasing with time for short wavelength bands, especially for M1-M4. The maximum annual average differences between DNB detectors are 0.77% in 2017 at HAM-A. For the M bands, the maximum detector differences in 2017 are 1.7% for M1, 1.8% for M2, 1.3% for M3, 1.2% for M4, 0.67% for M5, 0.75% for M7, 0.57% for M8, 13% for M9, 0.63% for M10, and 0.66% for M11. The average HAM side A to B difference in 2017 are 0.00% for DNB, 0.22% for M1, 0.17% for M2, 0.15% for M3, 0.09% for M4, -0.07% for M5, 0.02% for M7, 0.01% for M8, 1.4% for M9, 0.01% for M10, and 0.03% for M11. Results for M6 are not available due to the signal saturation and M9 results are not accurate because of the low reflectance from the desert site and the strong atmospheric absorption in this channel. The results in this study help scientists better understand each detectors performance and HAM side characteristics. Additionally, they provide evidence and motivation for future VIIRS calibration improvements

    Characterization and Performance of the Suomi-NPP VIIRS Solar Diffuser Stability Monitor

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    We describe the on-orbit characterization and performance of the Solar Diffuser Stability Monitor (SDSM) on-board Suomi-NPP/VIIRS. This description includes the observing procedure of each SDSM event, the algorithms used to generate the Solar Diffuser degradation corrective factors, and the results for the mission to date. We will also compare the performance of the VIIRS SDSM and SD to the similar components operating on the MODIS instrument on the EOS Terra and Aqua satellite
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