Calibration of the reflected solar instrument for the climate absolute radiance...

Thome, K., et al. (2010), Calibration of the reflected solar instrument for the climate absolute radiance and refractivity observatory, IEEE International Geoscience and Remote Sensing Symposium. ISBN, 2275-2278, doi:10.1109/IGARSS.2010.5651486.
Abstract: 

The Climate Absolute Radiance and Refractivity Observatory (CLARREO) plans to observe climate change trends over decadal time scales to determine the accuracy of climate projections. The project relies on spaceborne earth observations of SI-traceable variables sensitive to key decadal change parameters. The mission includes a reflected solar instrument retrieving at-sensor reflectance over the 320 to 2300 nm spectral range with 500-m spatial resolution and 100-km swath. Reflectance is obtained from the ratio of measurements of the earth's surface to those while viewing the sun relying on a calibration approach that retrieves reflectance with uncertainties less than 0.3%. The calibration is predicated on heritage hardware, reduction of sensor complexity, adherence to detector-based calibration standards, and an ability to simulate in the laboratory on-orbit sources in both size and brightness to provide the basis of a transfer to orbit of the laboratory calibration including a link to absolute solar irradiance measurements.

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Research Program: 
Radiation Science Program (RSP)
Mission: 
CLARREO