Title :
Initial flight test results from the EO-1 Advanced Land Imager: radiometric performance
Author :
Mendenhall, J.A. ; Hearn, D.R. ; Evans, J.B. ; Lencioni, D.E. ; Digenis, C.J. ; Welsh, R.D.
Author_Institution :
Lincoln Lab., MIT, Lexington, MA, USA
Abstract :
The Advanced Land Imager (ALI) is one of three instruments flown on the first Earth Observing mission (EO-1) under NASA´s New Millennium Program (NMP). The primary NMP mission objective is to flight-validate advanced technologies that will enable dramatic improvements in performance, cost, mass and schedule for future, Landsat-like, Earth remote sensing instruments. ALI contains a number of innovative features, including all the Category 1 technology demonstrations of the EO-1 mission. These include the basic instrument architecture which employs a push-broom data collection mode, a wide field of view optical design, compact multispectral detector arrays, non-cryogenic HgCdTe for the short wave infrared bands, silicon carbide optics and a multi-level solar calibration technique. The Earth Observing-1 spacecraft was successfully launched on November 21, 2000. During the first sixty days on orbit, several Earth scenes were collected and on-orbit calibration techniques were exercised by the Advanced Land Imager. This paper presents the status of ALI radiometric performance characterization obtained from the data collected during that period
Keywords :
geophysical equipment; geophysical techniques; terrain mapping; 350 to 1000 nm; ALI; Advanced Land Imager; EO-1; Earth Observing mission; Earth Observing-1; HgCdTe; IR; SiC; geophysical measurement technique; infrared; instrument; land surface; multispectral detector arrays; optical design; optical imaging; push-broom data collection; radiometric performance; satellite remote sensing; terrain mapping; visible; wide field of view; Calibration; Costs; Earth; Infrared detectors; Instruments; Optical arrays; Remote sensing; Satellites; Space technology; Testing;
Conference_Titel :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium, 2001. IGARSS '01. IEEE 2001 International
Conference_Location :
Sydney, NSW
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7031-7
DOI :
10.1109/IGARSS.2001.976207