Remote Sensing (Feb 2019)

Radiance Uncertainty Characterisation to Facilitate Climate Data Record Creation

  • Christopher J. Merchant,
  • Gerrit Holl,
  • Jonathan P. D. Mittaz,
  • Emma R. Woolliams

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs11050474
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 5
p. 474

Abstract

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The uncertainty in a climate data records (CDRs) derived from Earth observations in part derives from the propagated uncertainty in the radiance record (the fundamental climate data record, FCDR) from which the geophysical estimates in the CDR are derived. A common barrier to providing uncertainty-quantified CDRs is the inaccessibility to CDR creators of appropriate radiance uncertainty information in the FCDR. Here, we propose radiance uncertainty information designed directly to facilitate estimation of propagated uncertainty in derived CDRs at full resolution and in gridded products. Errors in Earth observations are typically highly structured and complex, and the uncertainty information we propose is of intermediate complexity, sufficient to capture the main variability in propagated uncertainty in a CDR, while avoiding unfeasible complexity or data volume. The uncertainty and error correlation characteristics of uncertainty are quantified for three classes of error with different propagation properties: independent, structured and common radiance errors. The meaning, mathematical derivations, practical evaluation and example applications of this set of uncertainty information are presented.

Keywords