Abstract

The sea and land surface temperature radiometer (SLSTR) to be flown on the European Space Agency's (ESA) Sentinel-3 mission is a multichannel scanning radiometer that will continue the 21 year dataset of the along-track scanning radiometer (ATSR) series. As its name implies, measurements from SLSTR will be used to retrieve global sea surface temperatures to an uncertainty of <0.3 K traced to international standards. To achieve, these low uncertainties require an end-to-end instrument calibration strategy that includes prelaunch calibration at subsystem and instrument level, on-board calibration systems, and sustained post- launch activities. The authors describe the preparations for the prelaunch calibration activities, including the spectral response, the instrument level alignment tests, and the solar and infrared radiometric calibrations. A purpose built calibration rig has been designed and built at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory space department (RAL Space) that will accommodate the SLSTR instrument, the infrared calibration sources, and the alignment equipment. The calibra- tion rig has been commissioned and results of these tests will be presented. Finally, the authors will present the planning for the on-orbit monitoring and calibration activities to ensure that the calibration is maintained. These activities include vicarious calibration techniques that have been developed through previous missions and the deployment of ship-borne radiometers. © The Authors. Published by SPIE under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License. Distribution or reproduction of this work in whole or in part requires full attribution of the original pub- lication, including its DOI. (DOI: 10.1117/1.JRS.8.084980)

Highlights

  • The Sentinel-3 mission is one of a series of spacecraft that make up the space segment of the Copernicus program[1] and will measure ocean and land surface parameters

  • Smith et al.: Calibration approach and plan for the sea and land surface temperature radiometer does not affect the overall calibration strategy since the calibration sources are common to all detectors, but that coefficients need to be provided for each pixel and viewed separately

  • The purpose of this paper is to present the overall calibration strategy for the sea and land surface temperature radiometer (SLSTR) instrument covering the calibration model and initial uncertainty estimates, on-board calibration systems, preflight calibrations, and the characterization testing moving toward the postlaunch monitoring needed to maintain the calibration

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Summary

Introduction

The Sentinel-3 mission is one of a series of spacecraft that make up the space segment of the Copernicus program[1] and will measure ocean and land surface parameters. SLSTR (Fig. 1) will be used to retrieve global sea surface temperatures (SSTs) to an uncertainty of

Sea and Land Surface Temperature Radiometer Calibration Approach
Thermal Infrared
Solar Reflectance Channels
Geometric Calibration
Spectral Response
Infrared Calibration
Solar Channel Calibration
Calibration Rig
Postlaunch Activities
Findings
Conclusions
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