Remote Sensing (Mar 2024)

Landsat 9 Thermal Infrared Sensor-2 (TIRS-2) Pre- and Post-Launch Spatial Response Performance

  • Rehman Eon,
  • Brian N. Wenny,
  • Ethan Poole,
  • Sarah Eftekharzadeh Kay,
  • Matthew Montanaro,
  • Aaron Gerace,
  • Kurtis J. Thome

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16061065
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 6
p. 1065

Abstract

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The launch of Landsat 9 (L9) on 27 September 2021 marks the ongoing commitment of the Landsat mission to delivering users with calibrated Earth observations for fifty years. The two imaging sensors on L9 are the Thermal Infrared Sensor-2 (TIRS-2) and the Operational Land Imager-2 (OLI-2). Shortly after launch, the image data from OLI-2 and TIRS-2 were evaluated for both radiometric and geometric quality. This paper provides a synopsis of the evaluation of the spatial response of the TIRS-2 instrument. The assessment focuses on determining the instrument’s ability to detect a perfect knife edge. The spatial response was evaluated both pre- and post-launch. Pre-launch testing was performed at NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) under flight-like thermal vacuum (TVAC) conditions. On orbit, coastline targets were identified to evaluate the spatial response and compared against Landsat 8 (L8). The pre-launch results indicate that the spatial response of the TIRS-2 sensor is consistent with its predecessor on board L8, with no noticeable decline in image quality to compromise any TIRS science objectives. Similarly, the post-launch analysis shows no apparent degradation of the TIRS-2 focus during the launch and the initial operational timeframe.

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