An Example Crossover Experiment for Testing New Vicarious Calibration Techniques for Satellite Ocean Color Radiometry

Author:

Voss Kenneth J.1,McLean Scott2,Lewis Marlon2,Johnson Carol3,Flora Stephanie4,Feinholz Michael4,Yarbrough Mark4,Trees Charles5,Twardowski Mike6,Clark Dennis7

Affiliation:

1. Physics Department, University of Miami, Coral Gables, Florida

2. Dalhousie University, and Satlantic Inc., Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada

3. Optical Technology Division, National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, Maryland

4. Moss Landing Marine Laboratory, Moss Landing, California

5. NATO Undersea Research Centre, La Spezia, Italy

6. * WET Labs, Inc., Narragansett, Rhode Island

7. DBA Marine Optical Consulting, Arnold, Maryland, and the Joint NIST/Utah State University Program in Optical Sensor Calibration, Utah State University Research Foundation, Logan, Utah

Abstract

Abstract Vicarious calibration of ocean color satellites involves the use of accurate surface measurements of water-leaving radiance to update and improve the system calibration of ocean color satellite sensors. An experiment was performed to compare a free-fall technique with the established Marine Optical Buoy (MOBY) measurement. It was found in the laboratory that the radiance and irradiance instruments compared well within their estimated uncertainties for various spectral sources. The spectrally averaged differences between the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) values for the sources and the instruments were <2.5% for the radiance sensors and <1.5% for the irradiance sensors. In the field, the sensors measuring the above-surface downwelling irradiance performed nearly as well as they had in the laboratory, with an average difference of <2%. While the water-leaving radiance Lw calculated from each instrument agreed in almost all cases within the combined instrument uncertainties (approximately 7%), there was a relative bias between the two instrument classes/techniques that varied spectrally. The spectrally averaged (400–600 nm) difference between the two instrument classes/techniques was 3.1%. However, the spectral variation resulted in the free-fall instruments being 0.2% lower at 450 nm and 5.9% higher at 550 nm. Based on the analysis of one matchup, the bias in Lw was similar to that observed for Lu(1 m) with both systems, indicating the difference did not come from propagating Lu(1 m) to Lw.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Ocean Engineering

Reference20 articles.

1. The “BOUSSOLE” buoy—A new transparent-to-swell taut mooring dedicated to marine optics: Design, tests, and performance at sea.;Antoine;J. Atmos. Oceanic Technol.,2008

2. The Marine Optical Buoy (MOBY) radiometric calibration and uncertainty budget for ocean color satellite sensor vicarious calibration.;Brown,2007

3. Validation of atmospheric correction over the oceans.;Clark;J. Geophys. Res.,1997

4. Overview of the radiometric calibration of MOBY.;Clark,2002

5. MOBY, a radiometric buoy for performance monitoring and vicarious calibration of satellite ocean color sensors: Measurement and data analysis protocols.;Clark,2003

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