Title :
A generalized split-window algorithm for retrieving land-surface temperature from space
Author :
Wan, Zhengming ; Dozier, Jeff
Author_Institution :
Inst. for Comput. Earth. Syst. Sci., California Univ., Santa Barbara, CA, USA
fDate :
7/1/1996 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
Proposes a generalized split-window method for retrieving land-surface temperature (LST) from AVHRR and MODIS data. Accurate radiative transfer simulations show that the coefficients in the split-window algorithm for LST must vary with the viewing angle, if the authors are to achieve a LST accuracy of about 1 K for the whole scan swath range (±55° from nadir) and for the ranges of surface temperature and atmospheric conditions over land, which are much wider than those over oceans. The authors obtain these coefficients from regression analysis of radiative transfer simulations, and they analyze sensitivity and error over wide ranges of surface temperature and emissivity and atmospheric water vapor abundance and temperature. Simulations show that when atmospheric water vapor increases and viewing angle is larger than 45°, it is necessary to optimize the split-window method by separating the ranges of the atmospheric water vapor, lower boundary temperature, and the surface temperature into tractable subranges. The atmospheric lower boundary temperature and (vertical) column water vapor values retrieved from HIRS/2 or MODIS atmospheric sounding channels can be used to determine the range for the optimum coefficients of the split-window method. This new algorithm not only retrieves land-surface temperature more accurately, but is also less sensitive to uncertainty in emissivity and to instrument quantization error
Keywords :
atmospheric boundary layer; atmospheric techniques; atmospheric temperature; geophysical techniques; radiometry; remote sensing; terrestrial heat; AVHRR; IR radiometry; MODIS; atmosphere temperature; boundary layer; generalized split-window algorithm; geophysical measurement technique; land surface; land-surface temperature; meteorology; radiative transfer simulation; regression analysis; remote sensing; terrain mapping; terrestrial heat; Atmospheric modeling; Information retrieval; Land surface; Land surface temperature; MODIS; Ocean temperature; Regression analysis; Sea surface; Temperature distribution; Temperature sensors;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on