Terra and Aqua MODIS Thermal Emissive Bands Calibration and RVS Stability Assessments Using an In Situ Ocean Target

2021 
Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS), whose openly public data have been used for over two decades to monitor and address global issues, has 16 thermal emissive bands (TEBs) with central wavelengths that range from 3.7 to 14.4 μm and are calibrated on-orbit using observations from its on-board blackbody. To maintain MODIS' rich, well-calibrated archive of multispectral imagery and data, Earth targets are regularly used to track its long-term stability as well as the consistency between the two sensors onboard the Terra and Aqua satellites. Moreover, these scenes can be used to compare MODIS Earth view data over the complete scan-angle range and evaluate the on-orbit performance of the TEBs response-versus-scan-angle (RVS) over the mission lifetime. This article focuses on evaluating the MODIS TEBs Collection (C6.1) radiometric calibration stability for both instruments using an in situ ocean target as reference [hereafter referred to as in situ sea surface temperature (SST)]. Furthermore, it will assess the calibration consistency between the MODIS sensors. Finally, it will analyze the on-orbit RVS stability for Terra and Aqua MODIS. Only cloud-free, nighttime MODIS TEB retrievals were used for the study. A normalization methodology is applied to standardize the MODIS data to the in situ SST. In addition, spectral corrections were derived between some of the Terra and Aqua MODIS TEBs by using a combination of the MODIS Atmospheric Profile product and MODerate resolution atmospheric TRANsmission (MODTRAN) simulations. Results indicate that most MODIS TEBs exhibit mission-long trends of ±0.50 K--with Terra band 30 presenting the largest downward drift due to residual electronic crosstalk effects. Moreover, the calibration consistency analysis over a warm ocean target demonstrated that the average Terra-to-Aqua MODIS bias for most bands is well within ±0.50 K (bands 27 and 30 show the largest--electronic crosstalk-related--biases). Finally, the MODIS TEBs RVS trends display changes of ±0.50 K (except for bands 25 and 27 at the end-of-scan angles) for both instruments. Overall, the MODIS TEBs remain well-calibrated and their RVSs aptly characterized.
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