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A Novel Framework to Harmonise Satellite Data Series for Climate Applications

Authors :
Ralf Giering
Ralf Quast
Jonathan P. D. Mittaz
Samuel E. Hunt
Peter M. Harris
Emma R. Woolliams
Christopher J. Merchant
Source :
Remote Sensing, Vol 11, Iss 9, p 1002 (2019)
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
MDPI AG, 2019.

Abstract

Fundamental and thematic climate data records derived from satellite observations provide unique information for climate monitoring and research. Since any satellite only operates over a relatively short period of time, creating a climate data record also requires the combination of space-borne measurements from a series of several (often similar) satellite sensors. Simply combining calibrated measurements from several sensors can, however, produce an inconsistent climate data record. This is particularly true of older, historic sensors whose behaviour in space was often different from their behaviour during pre-launch calibration and more scientific value can be derived from considering the series of historical and present satellites as a whole. Here, we consider harmonisation as a process that obtains new calibration coefficients for revised sensor calibration models by comparing calibrated measurements over appropriate satellite-to-satellite matchups, such as simultaneous nadir overpasses and which reconciles the calibration of different sensors given their estimated spectral response function differences. We present the concept of a framework that establishes calibration coefficients and their uncertainty and error covariance for an arbitrary number of sensors in a metrologically-rigorous manner. We describe harmonisation and its mathematical formulation as an inverse problem that is extremely challenging when some hundreds of millions of matchups are involved and the errors of fundamental sensor measurements are correlated. We solve the harmonisation problem as marginalised errors in variables regression. The algorithm involves computation of first and second-order partial derivatives using Algorithmic Differentiation. Finally, we present re-calibrated radiances from a series of nine Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer sensors showing that the new time series has smaller matchup differences compared to the unharmonised case while being consistent with uncertainty statistics.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20724292 and 11091002
Volume :
11
Issue :
9
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Remote Sensing
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.88a57a8e3a74c15a5dd1e95da560bc6
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/rs11091002