Brazilians Scientists Produce Orbital Sensor Calibration Guidebook
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FAPESP noting that Brazilians Scientists produce Orbital Sensor Calibration Guidebook.
Duda
Falcão
NEWS
Scientists
Produce Orbital
Sensor Calibration Guidebook
By José
Tadeu Arantes
July 15,
2015
(Photo:
release)
Agência FAPESP – A
guidebook explaining the procedures required to guarantee the quality and
accuracy of the information supplied by satellites has just been published by a
team of Brazilian researchers.
Entitled Calibração de sensores orbitais, the book was written
by Flávio Jorge Ponzoni (National Space Research Institute, INPE), Cibele
Teixeira Pinto (INPE and the Brazilian Air Force Command’s Institute for
Advanced Studies, IEAv), Rubens Augusto Camargo Lamparelli (University of
Campinas, UNICAMP), Jurandir Zullo Junior (UNICAMP), and Mauro Antonio Homem
Antunes (Federal Rural University of Rio de Janeiro, UFRRJ).
Distilling insights from years of study, the book
comes at a time of growing demand for remote sensing to investigate climate
change, monitor forests and estimate crop yields, among many other
applications.
Several of the book’s authors are members of the CEOS
Working Group on Calibration & Validation (WGCV). CEOS is the Committee on
Earth Observation Satellites, which Brazil joined in 2009.
The WGCV’s mission is to standardize the methodologies
and procedures used by countries that possess earth-observing systems to ensure
their interoperability and the comparability of data obtained from different
parts of the globe.
The first calibration performed by Ponzoni, the
coordinator of the group, and the first in the southern hemisphere, occurred at
Bolivia’s Uyuni Salt Flats as part of the project “Evaluation of changes in the radiometric sensitivity of the TM/Landsat
sensor from 1988 to 1997 and spectral characterization of the test area,”
supported by FAPESP.
“Uyuni was chosen because we needed to perform the
calibration on a very bright, smooth surface,” Ponzoni told Agência FAPESP. “In
addition to these two features, the Bolivian salt desert offered the advantage
of low atmospheric disturbance thanks to its high altitude at 3,600 m.”
The first step of calibration consists of ground
measurements of the radiance reflected by the surface at the exact moment of
the satellite’s passage over the area. The reflected radiance is the intensity
of the electromagnetic energy reflected by the surface, measured at different
wavelengths.
Ideally, the satellite should detect the same value
measured on the ground, but the atmosphere produces distortions. Thus, the next
step entails modifying the data collected in the field using information about
the atmosphere to obtain a theoretical estimate of the radiance measured by the
sensor on board the satellite.
In the final step, this theoretical estimate is
compared with the orbital sensor reading to determine a calibration coefficient,
which can then be used to convert the digital counts from satellite images into
physical values.
“Once the calibration has been performed, we can
determine real ground reflectance in each band of the electromagnetic spectrum
for all satellite sensor data,” Ponzoni said.
“And when we know that, we can estimate the
physicochemical properties of the object observed, such as the soil’s iron
content, or the amount of biomass in the plant cover and even leaf inclination
angles.”
Radiometric Values
The many applications of satellite sensor data include
monitoring deforestation, appraising reservoir water quality, estimating crop
yields and investigating the phytosanitary characteristics of plant cover,
among countless other qualitative and quantitative parameters.
According to Ponzoni, Brazil was not especially
interested in orbital sensor calibration until around the mid-1990s because
there was a culture of buying data produced abroad.
“We would buy the rights to satellite images produced
by other space programs and use them basically as if they were photographs,” he
said.
As demand became more sophisticated, however, users
learned that satellite images are much more than photographs; they provide a
wealth of quantitative data, such as plant biomass, chlorophyll stocks,
suspended sediment loads in water supply reservoirs, and many other variables
in a wide variety of contexts.
“This led to the realization that we had to develop
our calibration capabilities,” Ponzoni said. “By acquiring sensor calibration
data, we can use satellite images not just as photographs but also as a source
of radiometric data. This, in turn, enables us to characterize targets
spectrally and hence arrive at quantitative estimates of the variables
described.”
INPE maintains a database of all satellite data
collected in Brazil.
Calibração
de Sensores Orbitais
Authors:
Flávio Jorge Ponzoni, Cibele Teixeira Pinto, Rubens Augusto Camargo Lamparelli,
Jurandir Zullo Junior, Mauro Antonio Homem Antunes
Publisher:
Oficina de Textos
Nº
of pages: 96
Price:
R$45.00 (e-book R$38.25)
More
information: www.ofitexto.com.br/calibracao-de-sensores-orbitais/p (in
Portuguese)
Source: English WebSite of the Agência FAPESP
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