Frontiers in Remote Sensing (Aug 2021)

Earth Imaging From the Surface of the Moon With a DSCOVR/EPIC-Type Camera

  • Nick Gorkavyi,
  • Simon Carn,
  • Matt DeLand,
  • Yuri Knyazikhin,
  • Nick Krotkov,
  • Alexander Marshak,
  • Ranga Myneni,
  • Alexander Vasilkov

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/frsen.2021.724074
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2

Abstract

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The Earth Polychromatic Imaging Camera (EPIC) on the Deep Space Climate Observatory (DSCOVR) satellite observes the entire Sun-illuminated Earth from sunrise to sunset from the L1 Sun-Earth Lagrange point. The L1 location, however, confines the observed phase angles to ∼2°–12°, a nearly backscattering direction, precluding any information on the bidirectional surface reflectance factor (BRF) or cloud/aerosol phase function. Deploying an analog of EPIC on the Moon’s surface would offer a unique opportunity to image the full range of Earth phases, including observing ocean/cloud glint reflection for different phase angles; monitoring of transient volcanic clouds; detection of circum-polar mesospheric and stratospheric clouds; estimating the surface BRF and full phase-angle integrated albedo; and monitoring of vegetation characteristics for different phase angles.

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