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NOAA-18 Instrument Calibration and Validation Briefing

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Title: NOAA-18 Instrument Calibration and Validation Briefing


1
NOAA-18 Instrument Calibration and Validation
Briefing
  • NOAA/NESDIS/Office of Research and Applications
  • As of the Week of June 20, 2005
  • For archived activities and latest news, please
    visit
  • http//www.orbit.nesdis.noaa.gov/smcd/spb/n18calva
    l

2
Weekly Highlights (June 20-24)
  • HIRS
  • On June 23, HIRS noise continues dropping.
    Several channels are now meeting the NEDN noise
    specification
  • AMSU-A
  • AMSU-A2 geolocation and co-registration errors
    are being confirmed
  • AMSU scan bias symmetry characterization
  • AMSU cloud liquid water
  • AVHRR
  • SST and aerosol diagnostics
  • MHS
  • Scan bias characterization
  • Possible geolocation errors

3
NOAA-18 Instrument Payload
We focus on these instruments
  • AVHRR/4 Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer
  • HIRS/4 High Resolution Infrared Sounder
  • AMSU-A Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit-A
  • MHS Microwave Humidity Sounder
  • SBUV/2 Solar Backscattered Ultraviolet Radiometer

4
Calibration and Validation Legend
  • PRT Platinum Resistance Thermometers
  • NEDN/T Noise Equivalent Delta Radiance/Temperatur
    e
  • ATOVS Advanced TIROS Operational Vertical
    Sounder (TOVS)
  • TOAST Total Ozone Analysis using SBUV/2 and TOVS
  • MSPPS Microwave Surface and Precipitation
    Product System
  • NDVI Normalized Difference Vegetation Index
  • SST Sea Surface Temperature
  • UV Ultraviolet
  • TPW Total Precipitable Water
  • CLW Cloud Liquid Water

5
ORA NOAA-18 Instrument Cal/Val Mission Goals
  • Monitor and improve NOAA-18 instrument
    post-launch calibration
  • Assess and quantify instrument noises though
    analyzing calibration target counts and channel
    measurements
  • Monitor possible instrument anomaly and provide
    recommended solution
  • Quantify satellite geolocation errors
  • Characterize other biases in radiance and
    products such as cross-track asymmetry through
    forward modeling and inter-satellite calibration
  • Validate NESDIS NOAA-18 products (ATOVS and
    MSPPS, TOAST, UV index, NDVI, SST) for
    operational implementation
  • Provide early demonstration and assessments of
    NOAA-18 data for improving numerical weather
    prediction through JCSDA

6
Our Team
  • Mitch Goldberg ORA/SMCD Division Chief, -
    Management and Technical Oversight
  • Fuzhong Weng ORA/SMCD/Sensor Physics Branch
    Chief and NOAA-18 cal/val team leader, instrument
    asymmetry and microwave products and algorithms,
    radiance bias assessments for NWP model
    applications
  • Changyong Cao HIRS instrument calibration
  • Fred Wu AVHRR VIS/IR instrument calibration
  • Tsan Mo AMSU/MHS instrument calibration
  • Jerry Sullivan AVHRR thermal channel
    calibration/ NDVI validation
  • Tony Reale HIRS/AMSU/MHS sounding
    channel/products validation
  • Mike Chalfant HIRS/AMSU/MHS sounding
    channel/products validation /geolocation
  • Ralph Ferraro AMSU/MHS window channels/MSPPS
    products validation
  • Larry Flynn SBUV product validation
  • Tom Kleespies AMSU on-orbit verification
  • Hank Drahos Sounding product validation
  • Dan Tarpley AVHRR product NDVI monitoring
  • John LeMashall Impacts assessments of NOAA-18
    data for NWP applications

7
HIRS Cal/Val News
  • HIRS noise continues to drop. Ch3, 11, and 12 now
    meet the NEDN noise spec. for the first time
  • Channel 1 spaceview is still out of range most of
    the time
  • See NEDN trending on http//www.orbit.nesdisnoaa.g
    ov/smcd/spb/multisensor/hirs/nedn

8
NOAA-18/HIRS Sample Orbit (June 7,
2005) Brightness Temperature for 19 IR channels
ch1 ch2 ch3 ch4 ch5 ch6 ch7 ch8 ch9
ch10 ch11 ch12 ch13 ch14 ch15 ch16 ch17 ch18
Chs 1-12 longwave channels do not meet the spec
Ch 12 for water vapor
9
NOAA-18/HIRS Sample Orbit (June 23, 2005)
Brightness temperature for all channels
ch1 ch2 ch3 ch4 ch5 ch6 ch7 ch8 ch9
ch10 ch11 ch12 ch13 ch14 ch15 ch16 ch17 ch18
Diminishing noises at all channels except ch1
10
AMSU Cal/Val News
  • AMSU-A geo-location and co-registration are being
    investigated by a few ORA scientists
  • AMSU-A1 and A2 display some misalignment, and A1
    appears to be geolocated slight positive
    alongtrack and slight positive crosstrack
  • AMSU-A2 appears to be geolocated negative along
    track and negative crosstrack
  • Characterization of AMSU-A2 cross-track
    asymmetry results in a high quality of products
  • The absolute asymmetry is characterized by the
    mean difference between simulations and
    observations at each beam position
  • The relative asymmetry is characterized by the
    mean difference between pairwise left-right side
    brightness temperature

11
NOAA-18 AMSU-A CHANNEL1 June 13
12
NOAA-18 AMSU-A CHANNEL15 June 13
13
AMSU Cloud Liquid Water vs. AVHHR Ch4
AMSU cloud liquid water is compared with AVHRR
image. AMSU cloud algorithm only retrieves
liquid water over oceans. It is seen that the
higher amount of liquid water is related to
strong convection corresponding to cold IR
temperature. This is a sanity check for initial
assessments of AMSU cloud algorithms
14
AVHRR Cal/Val News
  • AVHRR/3 IR data are used to produce global SST
    analysis. The products are demonstrated without
    excessive noises but with biases low (-0.35K to
    N17 and -0.45K to N16)
  • AVHRR/3 channel 1 and 2 are used to produce
    aerosol optical depth and estimate the aerosol
    angstrom. It is shown that channel 1 is biased
    high by 6.9, and channel 2 is biased low by
    -1.4

Aerosol angstrom exponent (related to a ratio
of two AODs in AVHRR channel 1 and 2) is a very
sensitive indicator of AVHRR calibration.
15
MHS Cal/Val News
  • MHS scan bias characterization
  • Earth scene brightness temperatures binned as
    function of scan position
  • MHS scan asymmetry is characterized by the mean
    brightness temperatures differenced pairwise left
    right (ascending solid line, descending
    dashed
  • Asymmetry from MHS window channels (89 and 157
    GHz) ambiguous ascending and descending
    portions of orbit have opposite signature,
    sounding channels show a slight bias (few tenth
    degree) with the right side being warmer
  • MHS geolocation error
  • The need for a possible  - 0.5 degree roll
    correction

16
MHS Scan Biases and Asymmetry
17
MHS Geolocation Errors
The composite images on the right quadrants view
the channel difference data from ascending and
descending nodes, showing only the main land /
sea features which only shows support for a
possible small roll correction in the ascending
pass
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