Remote Sensing (Apr 2020)

Stability Assessment of OCO-2 Radiometric Calibration Using Aqua MODIS as a Reference

  • Shanshan Yu,
  • Robert Rosenberg,
  • Carol Bruegge,
  • Lars Chapsky,
  • Dejian Fu,
  • Richard Lee,
  • Thomas Taylor,
  • Heather Cronk,
  • Christopher O’Dell,
  • Amit Angal,
  • Xiaoxiong Xiong,
  • David Crisp,
  • Annmarie Eldering

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12081269
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 8
p. 1269

Abstract

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With three imaging grating spectrometers, the Orbiting Carbon Observatory-2 (OCO-2) measures high spectral resolution spectra ( λ / Δ λ ≈ 19,000) of reflected solar radiation within the molecular oxygen (O 2 ) A-band at 0.765 μ m and two carbon dioxide (CO 2 ) bands at 1.61 and 2.06 μ m. OCO-2 uses onboard lamps with a reflective diffuser, solar observations through a transmissive diffuser, lunar measurements, and surface targets for radiometric calibration and validation. Separating calibrator aging from instrument degradation poses a challenge to OCO-2. Here we present a methodology for trending the OCO-2 Build 8R radiometric calibration using OCO-2 nadir observations over eight desert sites and nearly simultaneous observations from Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) with sensor viewing zenith angles of 15 ± 0.5 ∘ . For the O 2 A-band, this methodology is able to quantify a drift of −0.8 ± 0.1% per year and capture a small error in correcting the aging of the solar calibrator. For the other two OCO-2 bands, no measurable changes were seen, indicating less than 0.1% and less than 0.3% per year drift in the radiometric calibration of Band 2 and Band 3, respectively.

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