DocumentCode :
1506878
Title :
Results of POLDER in-flight calibration
Author :
Hagolle, Olivier ; Goloub, Philippe ; Deschamps, Pierre-Yves ; Cosnefroy, Hénè ; Briottet, Xavier ; Bailleul, Thierry ; Nicolas, Jean-Marc ; Parol, Frédéric ; Lafrance, Bruno ; Herman, Maurice
Author_Institution :
CNES, Toulouse, France
Volume :
37
Issue :
3
fYear :
1999
fDate :
5/1/1999 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
1550
Lastpage :
1566
Abstract :
POLDER is a CNES instrument on board NASDA´s ADEOS polar orbiting satellite, which was successfully launched in August 1996. On October 30, 1996, POLDER entered its nominal acquisition phase and worked perfectly until ADEOS´s early end of service on June 30, 1997. POLDER is a multispectral imaging radiometer/polarimeter designed to collect global and repetitive observations of the solar radiation reflected by the Earth/atmosphere system, with a wide field of view (2400 km) and a moderate geometric resolution (6 km). The instrument concept is based on telecentric optics, on a rotating wheel carrying 15 spectral filters and polarizers, and on a bidimensional charge coupled device (CCD) detector array. In addition to the classical measurement and mapping characteristics of a narrow-band imaging radiometer, POLDER has a unique ability to measure polarized reflectances using three polarizers (for three of its eight spectral bands, 443 to 910 nm) and to observe target reflectances from 13 different viewing directions during a single satellite pass. One of POLDER´s original features is that its in-flight radiometric calibration does not rely on any on-board device. Many calibration methods using well-characterized calibration targets have been developed to achieve a very high calibration accuracy. This paper presents the various methods implemented in the in-flight calibration plan and the results obtained during the instrument calibration phase: absolute calibration over molecular scattering, interband calibration over sunglint and clouds, multiangular calibration over deserts and clouds, intercalibration with Ocean Color and Temperature Scanner (OCTS), and water vapor channels calibration over sunglint using meteorological analysis. A brief description of the algorithm and of the performances of each method is given
Keywords :
atmospheric measuring apparatus; atmospheric techniques; calibration; geophysical equipment; geophysical techniques; oceanographic equipment; oceanographic techniques; remote sensing; ADEOS; IR imaging; POLDER; atmosphere; equipment; geophysical measurement technique; in-flight calibration; instrument; land surface; multispectral imaging; ocean; optical imaging; polarimeter; polarized reflectance; satellite remote sensing; terrain mapping; Calibration; Extraterrestrial measurements; Instruments; Optical arrays; Optical filters; Optical polarization; Optical scattering; Radiometry; Satellite broadcasting; Sea measurements;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0196-2892
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/36.763266
Filename :
763266
Link To Document :
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