ABSTRACT The aim of this study is to quantify the impact of the effect of long-term solar cycle variations in solar irradiance on the accuracy and temporal stability of ToA reflectance values from Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+/L7) sensor images. We used 1382 ETM+ scenes corresponding to five Pseudo-Invariant Calibration Sites (PICS), obtained between 2003 and 2020. Solar irradiance data from the Spectral Irradiance Monitor (SIM/SORCE) were used to calculate daily values of mean exoatmospheric solar irradiance (ESUN), implemented in the radiometric correction of ToA reflectance. Enhanced temporal stability coefficients and variance tests were calculated to evaluate the stability of the time series obtained. The results indicate that the use of daily SIM/SORCE solar spectra has a significant impact (alpha <0.001) on radiometric correction and the accuracy of ToA reflectance values. In radiometric calibration, the percentage of top of atmosphere temporal stability that can be recovered based on 5 Sahara PICS ETM+/L7 scenes can exceed 0.75%, 0.50%, 0.39%, 0.45%, 0.30% and 0.25% in the blue, green, red, NIR, SWIR-1 and SWIR-2 spectral bands, respectively, and is not considered statistically significant (alpha >0.05). We concluded that considering the effects of solar cycles during the radiometric calibration of multispectral sensors contributes to improving the long-term stability of ToA reflectance products.
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