Abstract

Bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) is a distribution of directional reflectance for varying viewing and solar geometry. BRDF of a target is important in processing optical image data from satellites, because the observed radiance has great dependency on the direction (or angle) of reflection. It is desirable that the BRDF of any targets is characterized for rigorous BRDF correction of satellite data, since the sun-sensor-target geometry of satellites often varies in a very limited range, limiting the full characterization of target BRDF. This study provides BRDF data set for typical coniferous forests in Korea, by using a multispectral camera onboard a unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV). By operating the UAV in a goniometer-like way, reflectance data for all possible viewing zenith and azimuth angles were obtained. The BRDF data collected from the 3 campaigns in different days were visualized in a polar-coordinate, together with the standard deviation calculated for each zenith/azimuth bin made in 1˚ interval. The data sets demonstrated reflectance distribution over the wide range of angles with sound data quality, suggesting commonly known BRDF characteristics for forests such as strong back-scattering and hot spot area in the viewing zenith angle near the solar zenith angle. This data set is expected to be utilized for the BRDF correction of various satellites including Agro-forest satellite of Korea which is to be launched in 2025 that has similar spectral bands with the ones used in this study.

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