Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-Calibration
The radiometric resolution of a satellite sensor refers to the smallest increment in the spectral radiance that can be detected by the imaging sensor. The fewer bits that are used for signal discretization, the larger the quantization error in the measured radiance. In satellite inter-calibration, a...
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doaj-2a810bc0fe1343b4a0cf755088230ccf2020-11-24T23:10:35ZengMDPI AGRemote Sensing2072-42922018-07-01107113110.3390/rs10071131rs10071131Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-CalibrationRajendra Bhatt0David Doelling1Conor Haney2Benjamin Scarino3Arun Gopalan4Science Systems and Applications, Inc., 1 Enterprise Pkwy, Hampton, VA 23666, USANASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA 23666, USAScience Systems and Applications, Inc., 1 Enterprise Pkwy, Hampton, VA 23666, USAScience Systems and Applications, Inc., 1 Enterprise Pkwy, Hampton, VA 23666, USAScience Systems and Applications, Inc., 1 Enterprise Pkwy, Hampton, VA 23666, USAThe radiometric resolution of a satellite sensor refers to the smallest increment in the spectral radiance that can be detected by the imaging sensor. The fewer bits that are used for signal discretization, the larger the quantization error in the measured radiance. In satellite inter-calibration, a difference in radiometric resolution between a reference and a target sensor can induce a calibration bias, if not properly accounted for. The effect is greater for satellites with a quadratic count response, such as the Geostationary Meteorological Satellite-5 (GMS-5) visible imager, where the quantization difference can introduce non-linearity in the inter-comparison datasets, thereby affecting the cross-calibration slope and offset. This paper describes a simulation approach to highlight the importance of considering the radiometric quantization in cross-calibration and presents a correction method for mitigating its impact. The method, when applied to the cross-calibration of GMS-5 and Terra Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) sensors, improved the absolute calibration accuracy of the GMS-5 imager. This was validated via radiometric inter-comparison of GMS-5 and Multifunction Transport Satellite-2 (MTSAT-2) imager top-of-atmosphere (TOA) measurements over deep convective clouds (DCC) and Badain Desert invariant targets. The radiometric bias between GMS-5 and MTSAT-2 was reduced from 1.9% to 0.5% for DCC, and from 7.7% to 2.3% for Badain using the proposed correction method.http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/7/1131quantizationcalibrationGMS-5MODIS |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Rajendra Bhatt David Doelling Conor Haney Benjamin Scarino Arun Gopalan |
spellingShingle |
Rajendra Bhatt David Doelling Conor Haney Benjamin Scarino Arun Gopalan Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-Calibration Remote Sensing quantization calibration GMS-5 MODIS |
author_facet |
Rajendra Bhatt David Doelling Conor Haney Benjamin Scarino Arun Gopalan |
author_sort |
Rajendra Bhatt |
title |
Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-Calibration |
title_short |
Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-Calibration |
title_full |
Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-Calibration |
title_fullStr |
Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-Calibration |
title_full_unstemmed |
Consideration of Radiometric Quantization Error in Satellite Sensor Cross-Calibration |
title_sort |
consideration of radiometric quantization error in satellite sensor cross-calibration |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Remote Sensing |
issn |
2072-4292 |
publishDate |
2018-07-01 |
description |
The radiometric resolution of a satellite sensor refers to the smallest increment in the spectral radiance that can be detected by the imaging sensor. The fewer bits that are used for signal discretization, the larger the quantization error in the measured radiance. In satellite inter-calibration, a difference in radiometric resolution between a reference and a target sensor can induce a calibration bias, if not properly accounted for. The effect is greater for satellites with a quadratic count response, such as the Geostationary Meteorological Satellite-5 (GMS-5) visible imager, where the quantization difference can introduce non-linearity in the inter-comparison datasets, thereby affecting the cross-calibration slope and offset. This paper describes a simulation approach to highlight the importance of considering the radiometric quantization in cross-calibration and presents a correction method for mitigating its impact. The method, when applied to the cross-calibration of GMS-5 and Terra Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) sensors, improved the absolute calibration accuracy of the GMS-5 imager. This was validated via radiometric inter-comparison of GMS-5 and Multifunction Transport Satellite-2 (MTSAT-2) imager top-of-atmosphere (TOA) measurements over deep convective clouds (DCC) and Badain Desert invariant targets. The radiometric bias between GMS-5 and MTSAT-2 was reduced from 1.9% to 0.5% for DCC, and from 7.7% to 2.3% for Badain using the proposed correction method. |
topic |
quantization calibration GMS-5 MODIS |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2072-4292/10/7/1131 |
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