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Radiometric Quality of VIIRS: Impact on Ocean Color Products

Gerhard Meister, NASA/Futuretech, gerhard.meister@nasa.gov (Presenting)
Sean Bailey, NASA/Futuretech, sean.bailey@nasa.gov
Robert Barnes, NASA/SAIC, robert.a.barnes@nasa.gov
Gene Eplee, NASA/SAIC, gene.e.eplee@nasa.gov
Gene Carl Feldman, NASA, gene.carl.feldman@nasa.gov
Charles McClain, NASA, charles.r.mcclain@nasa.gov
Fred Patt, NASA/SAIC, frederick.s.patt@nasa.gov
Wayne Robinson, NASA/SAIC, wayne.robinson@nasa.gov
Kevin Turpie, NASA/SAIC
Jeremy Werdell, NASA/SSAI, jeremy.werdell@nasa.gov

This poster summarizes the expectations of the NASA VIIRS Ocean Science Team regarding the impact of radiometric quality issues of the VIIRS sensor on ocean color products.



Crosstalk is the largest problem of the NPP VIIRS instrument

performance. We do not expect high quality ocean color retrievals when

large crosstalk is present. The subsequent VIIRS on NPOESS may have less crosstalk contamination due to a new focal plane.



For an ocean color sensor, long term radiometric stability is of the

highest importance. Several issues discussed in this poster regarding

the instrument calibration pose serious risks to producing water-leaving radiances without significant temporal trends.



No ocean color mission has delivered climate quality data products

without reprocessing its data. One basic problem is that

state-of-the-art primary calibration methods like solar diffuse, lunar

measurements and vicarious calibration operationally do not deliver the required radiometric accuracy. For the optimal derivation of long term trends, it is necessary to analyze the whole time series. An operational approach cannot exploit this advantage, and will therefore deliver suboptimal results.


NASA Carbon Cycle & Ecosystems Active Awards Represented by this Poster:

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