Abstract

The Earth-Observing One Hyperion sensor was decommissioned on March 20, 2017. Analysis of Libya 4 Pseudo-Invariant Calibration Sites (PICSs) image data acquired from 2004 to final decommissioning indicated statistically significant drifts in sensor response in the bands 8 to 16 (426.82, 436.99, 447.17, 457.34, 467.52, 477.69, 487.87, 498.04, and 508.22 nm) and bands 206 (2213.93 nm), 209 (2244.22 nm), and 210 (2254.22 nm). The estimated yearly drift in these bands ranges between −0.136% and −0.049%. After correction accounting for the estimated drift, the absolute radiometric calibration of the sensor was evaluated through vicarious reflectance-based calibrations performed at the South Dakota State University (SDSU) test site and the Radiometric Calibration Network (RadCalNet) Railroad Valley site using data from 2002 to 2015. Calibration correction coefficients including gain as much as 1.40 and bias as large as 0.132 were found except absorption bands (890–980, 1090–1180, 1305–1520, and 1750–2050 nm). Finally, the yearly drift and calibration correction coefficients were validated by comparison of the banded multispectral Hyperion data after any significant drift and calibration coefficient correction with Landsat 7 data. The validation showed that after drift and calibration coefficient correction, there is no significant gain and bias using different test sites at different signal levels. The drift and calibration correction coefficients of each band are provided in this paper.

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