Title of article :
Analysis of Rosetta/VIRTIS spectra of earth using observations from ENVISAT/AATSR, TERRA/MODIS and ENVISAT/SCIAMACHY, and radiative-transfer simulations
Author/Authors :
Hurley، نويسنده , , J. and Irwin، نويسنده , , P.G.J. and Adriani، نويسنده , , A. and Moriconi، نويسنده , , M. and Oliva، نويسنده , , F. and Capaccioni، نويسنده , , F. and Smith، نويسنده , , A. and Filacchione، نويسنده , , Natale G. and Tosi، نويسنده , , F. and Thomas، نويسنده , , G.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Abstract :
Rosetta, the Solar System cornerstone mission of ESAʹs Horizon 2000 programme, consists of an orbiter and a lander, and is due to arrive at the comet 67P/Churyumov–Gerasimenko in May 2014. Following its 2004 launch, Rosetta carried out a series of planetary fly-bys and gravitational assists. On these close fly-bys of the Earth, measurements were taken by the Visible Infrared Thermal Imaging Spectrometer (VIRTIS). Analysis of these spectra and comparison with spectra acquired by Earth-observing satellites can support the verification of the inflight calibration of Rosetta/VIRTIS.
s paper, measurements taken by VIRTIS in November 2009 are compared with suitable coincident data from Earth-observing instruments (ESA-ENVISAT/AATSR and SCIAMACHY, and EOS-TERRA/MODIS). Radiative transfer simulations using NEMESIS (Irwin et al., 2008) are fit to the fly-by data taken by VIRTIS, using representative atmospheric and surface parameters. VIRTIS measurements correlate 90% with AATSRʹs, 85–94% with MODIS, and 82–88% with SCIAMACHYs.
RTIS spectra are reproducible in the 1–5 μm region, except in the 1.4 μm deep water vapour spectral absorption band in the near-infrared in cases in which the radiance is very low (cloud-free topographies), where VIRTIS consistently registers more radiance than do MODIS and SCIAMACHY. Over these cloud-free regions, VIRTIS registers radiances a factor of 3–10 larger than SCIAMACHY and of 3–8 greater than MODIS. It is speculated that this discrepancy could be due to a spectral light leak originating from reflections from the order-sorting filters above the detector around 1.4 μm.
Keywords :
Rosetta/VIRTIS , Atmospheres , Earth observation , Infrared , COMET , radiative transfer
Journal title :
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE
Journal title :
PLANETARY AND SPACE SCIENCE