Planning a Reference Constellation for Radiometric Cross-Calibration of Commercial Earth Observing Sensors [CL]

http://arxiv.org/abs/2010.09946


The Earth Observation planning community has access to tools that can propagate orbits and compute coverage of Earth observing imagers with customizable shapes and orientation, model the expected Earth Reflectance at various bands, epochs and directions, generate simplified instrument performance metrics for imagers and radars, and schedule single and multiple spacecraft payload operations. We are working toward integrating existing tools to design a planner that allows commercial small spacecraft to assess the opportunities for cross-calibration of their sensors against current satellite to be calibrated, specifications of the reference instruments, sensor stability, allowable latency between calibration measurements, differences in viewing and solar geometry between calibration measurements, etc. The planner would output cross-calibration opportunities for every reference target pair as a function of flexible user-defined parameters. We use a preliminary version of this planner to inform the design of a constellation of transfer radiometers that can serve as stable, radiometric references for commercial sensors to cross-calibrate with. We propose such a constellation for either vicarious cross-calibration using pre-selected sites, or top of the atmosphere (TOA) cross-calibration globally. Results from the calibration planner applied to a subset of informed architecture designs show that a 4 sat constellation provides multiple calibration opportunities within half a day planning horizon, for Cubesat sensors deployed into a typical rideshare orbits. While such opportunities are available for cross calibration image pairs within 5 deg of solar or view directions, and with-in an hour (for TOA) and less than a day (vicariously), the planner allows us to identify many more by relaxing user-defined restrictions.

Read this paper on arXiv…

S. Nag, P. Dabney, V. Ravindra, et. al.
Wed, 21 Oct 20
55/79

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