2022 CEOS International Thermal Infrared Radiometer Comparison. Part I: Laboratory Comparison of Radiometers and Blackbodies

Author:

Yamada Yoshiro1ORCID,Harris Subrena1,Hayes Michael1,Simpson Rob1,Wimmer Werenfrid2,Holmes Raymond2,Nightingale Tim3,Lee Arrow3,Jepsen Nis4,Morgan Nicole5,Göttsche Frank-M.6,Niclòs Raquel7,Perelló Martín7,Donlon Craig8,Fox Nigel1

Affiliation:

1. a National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, United Kingdom

2. b University of Southampton, Southampton, United Kingdom

3. c Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, Science and Technology Facilities Council, Oxon, United Kingdom

4. d Danish Meteorological Institute, Copenhagen, Denmark

5. e CSIRO/Australian Bureau of Meteorology, Battery Point, Tasmania, Australia

6. f Karlsruhe Institute of Technology, Eggenstein-Leopoldshafen, Germany

7. g University of Valencia, Valencia, Spain

8. h European Space Agency, Noordwijk, Netherlands

Abstract

Abstract An international comparison of field deployed radiometers for sea surface skin temperature (SSTskin) retrieval was conducted in June 2022. The campaign comprised a laboratory comparison and a field comparison. In the laboratory part, the radiometers were compared with reference standard blackbodies, while the same was done with the blackbodies used for the calibration of the radiometers against a transfer standard radiometer. Reference values were provided by the National Physical Laboratory (NPL), traceable to the primary standard on the International Temperature Scale of 1990. This was followed by the field comparison at a seaside pier on the south coast of England, where the radiometers were compared against each other while viewing the closely adjacent surface of the sea. This paper reports the results of the laboratory comparison of radiometers and blackbodies. For the blackbody comparison, the brightness temperature of the blackbody reported by the participants agreed with the reference value measured by the NPL transfer standard radiometer within the uncertainties for all temperatures and for all blackbodies. For the radiometer comparison, the temperature range of most interest from the SSTskin retrieval point of view is 10°–30°C, and in this temperature range, and up to the maximum comparison temperature of 50°C, all participants’ reported results were in agreement with the reference. On the other hand, below 0°C the reported values showed divergence from the reference and the differences exceeded the uncertainties. The divergence shows there is room for improvement in uncertainty estimation at lower temperatures, although it will have limited implication in the SSTskin retrieval.

Funder

European Space Agency

Spanish National Plan for Scientific and Technical Research and Innovation

Generalitat Valenciana

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Reference30 articles.

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2. Barker-Snook, I., E. Theocharous, and N. P. Fox, 2017b: 2016 comparison of IR brightness temperature measurements in support of satellite validation. Part 3: Sea surface temperature comparison of radiation thermometers. NPL Tech. Rep. ENV 15, 58 pp., http://www.frm4sts.org/wp-content/uploads/sites/3/2017/12/FRM4STS_D100_TR-2_Part3_WST_23Jun17-signed.pdf.

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