Radiometric calibration of commercial imaging satellite products is required to ensure that science and application communities can better understand their properties. Inaccurate radiometric calibrations can lead to erroneous decisions and invalid conclusions and can limit intercomparisons with other systems. To address this calibration need, satellite at-sensor radiance values were compared to those estimated by each independent team member to determine the sensor's radiometric accuracy. The combined results of this evaluation provide the user community with an independent assessment of these commercially available high spatial resolution sensors' absolute calibration values
EOS satellite instruments operating in the visible through the shortwave infrared wavelength regions...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
The NASA team of University of Arizona, South Dakota State University, and NASA SSC produce consiste...
Radiometric calibration of commercial imaging satellite products is required to ensure that science ...
This viewgraph presentation reviews the characterization of radiometric data by NASA. The objective ...
This paper describes the results of commercial high spatial resolution sensors. The topics include: ...
Scientists within NASA s Applied Sciences Directorate have developed a well-characterized remote sen...
NASA SSC maintains four ASD FieldSpec FR spectroradiometers: 1) Laboratory transfer radiometers; 2) ...
Measurement and accuracy needs for remote sensing are analyzed. Topics discussed include: (1) in orb...
The need for independent, redundant absolute radiometric calibration methods is discussed with refer...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
The need for absolute radiometric calibration of space-based sensors will continue to increase as ne...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
EOS satellite instruments operating in the visible through the shortwave infrared wavelength regions...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
The NASA team of University of Arizona, South Dakota State University, and NASA SSC produce consiste...
Radiometric calibration of commercial imaging satellite products is required to ensure that science ...
This viewgraph presentation reviews the characterization of radiometric data by NASA. The objective ...
This paper describes the results of commercial high spatial resolution sensors. The topics include: ...
Scientists within NASA s Applied Sciences Directorate have developed a well-characterized remote sen...
NASA SSC maintains four ASD FieldSpec FR spectroradiometers: 1) Laboratory transfer radiometers; 2) ...
Measurement and accuracy needs for remote sensing are analyzed. Topics discussed include: (1) in orb...
The need for independent, redundant absolute radiometric calibration methods is discussed with refer...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
The need for absolute radiometric calibration of space-based sensors will continue to increase as ne...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
EOS satellite instruments operating in the visible through the shortwave infrared wavelength regions...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...
A challenge for the scientific community in respect to the ever-increasing number of Earth observing...