Abstract
The post-launch calibration of the visible (channel l:≈0·58–0·68μm) and near-infrared (channel 2: ≈ 0·72–1·1 μm) channels of the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) on the NOAA-14 spacecraft is described. The southeastern part of the Libyan desert (21–23° N latitude; 28–29° E longitude) is used as a radiometrically stable calibration target to determine the ‘slope’—the inverse of the gain—of the AVHRR, expressed in units of W (m−2 sr−1 μm−1 count−1), in the two channels in the course of 1995. The variation of the ‘slope’ with time during 1995 indicates that channel 1 has degraded at the annual rate of 7·7 per cent; and channel 2 at the rate of 10·5 per cent. Comparison of the AVHRR ‘slopes’ immediately after launch of NOAA-14 with the results of pre-launch calibration performed in September/October 1993 indicates that channel 2 experienced a deterioration of ≈ 18 per cent (relative) immediately after launch while channel 1 was not appreciably affected. Formulae are given for the calculation of the post-launch calibration coefficients for the two channels.

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