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Long-term cross calibration of HJ-1A CCD1 and Terra MODIS reflective solar bands

Li Liu, Tingting Shi, Hailiang Gao, Xuewen Zhang, Qijin Han, Xuanjie Hu

2021Scientific Reports15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Since its launch on September 6, 2008, HJ-1A has been in the orbit for 13 years. The CCD1 sensor on the HJ-1A has four reflected solar bands. Since the calibration frequency is limited to the annual site calibration, cross-calibration is an effective method to improve the calibration frequency. In this paper, we use 420 image pairs of HJ-1A CCD1 and Terra MODIS over the Dunhuang test site for gains calculation, where we take MODIS as the reference sensor. The spectral band adjustment factors (SBAFs) for cross-calibration are then calculated to compensate for the spectral mismatch. The cross-calibration results are also validated by the field calibration results. From 2008 to 2019, a total of six campaigns have been cross-calibrated on the same day. The gain difference between the site calibration and cross-calibration is less than 3%. The long-term cross-calibration results further indicate that due to the adjustment of HJ-1A CCD gain state in October 2009, an abrupt change occurred 405 days after launch. After 12 years of on-orbit operation, the attenuation rate has reached 23.51%, 21.89%, 8.11%, and 13.37%, respectively by the end of 2019 based on the cross-calibration results.

Topics & Concepts

CalibrationRemote sensingEnvironmental scienceAttenuationOrbit (dynamics)Spectral bandsTerm (time)PhysicsGeologyOpticsEngineeringAerospace engineeringQuantum mechanicsCalibration and Measurement TechniquesAtmospheric Ozone and ClimateAdaptive optics and wavefront sensing
Long-term cross calibration of HJ-1A CCD1 and Terra MODIS reflective solar bands | Litcius