Remote Sensing (May 2024)

Pre-Launch Assessment of PACE OCI’s Polarization Sensitivity

  • Jeff McIntire,
  • Eugene Waluschka,
  • Gerhard Meister,
  • Joseph Knuble,
  • William B. Cook

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs16111851
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 11
p. 1851

Abstract

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To provide ongoing continuity for the ocean, cloud, and aerosol science data records, NASA will launch the Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) mission on 8 February 2024. The Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) is the primary sensor onboard PACE and will provide ocean color science data to continue the data sets collected by heritage sensors MODIS, SeaWiFS, and VIIRS, but with increased spectral coverage and improved accuracy. The OCI is a grating spectrometer with hyperspectral coverage from the ultraviolet (about 315 nm) to near-infrared (about 900 nm), with additional filtered channels in the short-wave infrared (940 nm–2260 nm). A rigorous ground test program was conducted to calibrate the instrument and ensure that the calibration can be transferred to on-orbit operations in order to achieve the high levels of accuracy demanded by the science community. Some calibration parameters, such as polarization sensitivity, can only be measured during pre-launch testing. Tests were performed to measure the Mueller matrix components necessary to correct polarized scenes encountered on orbit. Measurements covered all spectral bands and a series of telescope scan angles encompassing the expected on-orbit scan range. The sensitivity (linear diattenuation) was measured above 340 nm to be below 0.6%, except at wavelengths, and was characterized as better than 0.1%. Below 340 nm, the sensitivity can be much higher, but this is not expected to affect the science data significantly. These results indicate that any polarized scenes encountered on orbit can be corrected with a high degree of confidence.

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