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Comparison of sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence estimates from commercial spectroradiometers: an optimal setup for field measurement and aerial product validation

Authors :
Celesti, M
Rossini, M
Cogliati, S
Panigada, C
Tagliabue, G
Fava, F
Julitta, T
Macarthur, A
Colombo, R
CELESTI, MARCO
ROSSINI, MICOL
COGLIATI, SERGIO
PANIGADA, CINZIA
TAGLIABUE, GIULIA
FAVA, FRANCESCO PIETRO
JULITTA, TOMMASO
COLOMBO, ROBERTO
MacArthur, A
Celesti, M
Rossini, M
Cogliati, S
Panigada, C
Tagliabue, G
Fava, F
Julitta, T
Macarthur, A
Colombo, R
CELESTI, MARCO
ROSSINI, MICOL
COGLIATI, SERGIO
PANIGADA, CINZIA
TAGLIABUE, GIULIA
FAVA, FRANCESCO PIETRO
JULITTA, TOMMASO
COLOMBO, ROBERTO
MacArthur, A
Publication Year :
2016

Abstract

Sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence signal is explored as a novel remote sensing method, notable for its potential to be used as a direct indicator of photosynthetic efficiency. In the last years, there was an increasing interest of the scientific community on the remote sensing of Sun-Induced chlorophyll Fluorescence (SIF). Several SIF estimates in the far-red region have been produced from spaceborne sensors, and the future FLEX satellite mission (European Space Agency, Earth-Explorer 8) aims to detect canopy level SIF in both red and far-red regions at global scale. In the context of FLEX calibration/validation activities, a network of ground station to calibrate/validate SIF estimates from space can be considered crucial, but few studies have proposed optimal technical requirements for commercially available spectroradiometers. At canopy level, SIF is traditionally retrieved from incoming and upwelling radiance measurements, exploiting two narrow oxygen absorption bands, within the O2-B and O2-A spectral regions. Only recently, the feasibility of retrieving the SIF spectrum was demonstrated. The rationale behind the exploitation of narrow spectral regions, characterized by strong absorptions, resides in the higher contribution of SIF with respect to the reflected radiance. In order to detect the signal in those narrow spectral regions, high spectral resolution observation is needed. In this study, we compared several high resolution field spectroradiometers with different Full Width at Half Maximum (FWHM), Spectral Sampling Interval (SSI) and Signal-to-Noise Ratio (SNR), to evaluate their performance in SIF estimates. We applied several state-of-the-art, radiance-based retrieval algorithms to radiance measurements taken with the FluoWAT. This device allows to measure leaf reflected and transmitted radiance, solar incident radiance and, upward and downward leaf fluorescence spectrum by means of a low pass filter, that were used as a reference. Results show that

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1311391916
Document Type :
Electronic Resource