The estimation of atmospheric corrections to one-channel (11 ? m) data from the AVHRR; simulation using AVHRR/ 2
- 1 June 1985
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in International Journal of Remote Sensing
- Vol. 6 (6) , 927-945
- https://doi.org/10.1080/01431168508948516
Abstract
It has been established that the sea-surface brightness temperatures Tb4 in the 11 μ m channel and Tb4in the 12 μ m channel of the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR/ 2) are linearly related to a good degree of accuracy, i.e. Tb5= α+ β Tb4 Using AVHRR/ 2 data for various dates and from different parts of the world's oceans, the parameters a and 0 have been determined. The above relation may then be used for simulating Tb5 for those cases for which only Tb4 is available (e.g. for the AVHRR on TIROS-N, NOAA-6, NOAA-8, etc.). The brightness temperature TM and pseudo-brightness temperature Tb5 then enable one to use the split-window technique for estimating atmospherically-corrected sea-surface temperatures (SSTs) from the 11μ m channel data alone. Such an atmospheric correction technique should be a possibility because the 11μ m channel of the AVHRR on the various satellites in question are almost identical This technique has been used with two split-window algorithms for correcting the data from the 11μ m channel of the AVHRR instrument on the TIROS-N satellite obtained off south-western Portugal. One of the algorithms gives ‘ skin’ temperatures and the other algorithm gives bulk temperatures. The resulting SSTs for twelve dates from 15 June 1979 to 14 June 1980 have been compared with sea-surface (skin) temperatures which were obtained with airborne radiometer data obtained on the same dates.Keywords
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