Concept of a Satellite Cross-Calibration Radiometer for In-Orbit Calibration of Commercial Optical Satellites

Author:

Thankappan Medhavy1ORCID,Christopherson Jon2,Cantrell Simon2,Ryan Robert3,Pagnutti Mary3,Bright Courtney4,Naughton Denis1,Ruslander Kathryn2ORCID,Wang Lan-Wei1ORCID,Hudson David1,Shaw Jerad2,Ramaseri Chandra Shankar Nag2,Anderson Cody5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Geoscience Australia, Symonston, ACT 2609, Australia

2. KBR Inc., Earth Resources Observation and Science Center, Sioux Falls, SD 57198, USA

3. Innovative Imaging and Research Inc., Stennis Space Center, MS 39529, USA

4. CSIRO, Canberra, ACT 2601, Australia

5. United States Geological Survey, Earth Resources Observation and Science Center, Sioux Falls, SD 57198, USA

Abstract

The satellite Earth observation (EO) sector is burgeoning with hundreds of commercial satellites being launched each year, delivering a rich source of data that could be exploited for societal benefit. Data streams from the growing number of commercial satellites are of variable quality, limiting the potential for their combined use in science applications that need long time-series data from multiple sources. The quality of calibration performed on optical sensors onboard many satellite systems is highly variable due to calibration methods, sensor design, mission objective, budget, or other operational constraints. A small number of currently operating well-characterised satellite systems with onboard calibration, such as Landsat-8/9 and Sentinel-2, and planned future missions, like the NASA Climate Absolute Radiance and Refractivity Observatory (CLARREO) Pathfinder, the European Space Agency (ESA)’s Traceable Radiometry Underpinning Terrestrial and Helio Studies (TRUTHS), and LIBRA from China, are considered benchmarks for optical data quality due to their traceability to international measurement standards. This paper describes the concept of a space-based transfer calibration radiometer called the Satellite Cross-Calibration Radiometer (SCR) that would enable the calibration parameters from satellites such as Landsat-8/9, Sentinel-2, or other benchmark systems to be transferred to a range of commercial optical EO satellite systems while in orbit. A description of the key characteristics of the SCR to successfully operate in orbit and transfer calibration from reference systems to client systems is presented. A system like the SCR in orbit could complement SI-Traceable satellites (SITSats) to improve data quality and consistency and facilitate the interoperable use of data from multiple optical sensor systems for delivering higher returns on the global investment in EO.

Funder

U.S. Geological Survey

Publisher

MDPI AG

Reference35 articles.

1. (2021, November 26). Australian Space Agency, 2021: Earth Observation from Space Roadmap. Australian Space Agency Web Page, Accessed February 2024, Available online: https://www.space.gov.au/about-agency/publications/earth-observation-space-roadmap.

2. (2024, February 12). FrontierSI, 2021: AusCalVal: Establishing Australia as a Global Leader in Delivering Quality Assured Satellite Earth Observation Data. FrontierSI. Available online: https://frontiersi.com.au/auscalval/.

3. Satellite instrument calibration for measuring global climate change: Report on a workshop;Ohring;Bull. Am. Meteorol. Soc.,2005

4. Ohring, G.B. (2007). Achieving Satellite Instrument Calibration for Climate Change (ASIC3).

5. GEO (2005). The Global Earth Observation System of Systems (GEOSS) 10-Year Implementation Plan.

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