The S-NPP and N20 VIIRS Day-Night band (DNB) and M bands top-of-atmosphere (TOA) radiance and reflectance are calculated and a kernel-driven Bidirectional Reflectance Distribution Function (BRDF) correction model is used to correct the surface and atmosphere combined BRDF influence. Due to degradation in the DNB modulated Relative Spectral Response (RSR), the S-NPP VIIRS observed TOA DNB reflectance indicates a decrease of 1.89% and the SCIAMACHY spectra derived TOA DNB reflectance has a decrease of 1.63% for the past 8.5 years. The N20 VIIRS TOA DNB reflectance decreased 0.50% in the past 2.5 years. The DNB radiance is also compared with the integral of the M bands radiance from M4, M5, and M7. The fitting trends of DNB to the integral of M bands ratios indicate a 0.48% decrease for S-NPP VIIRS and 0.14% increase for N20 VIIRS. The N20 VIIRS DNB to integral M bands ratios are closer to 1 than the S-NPP VIIRS data. The BRDF corrected reflectance comparisons show that the N20 VIIRS data is slightly lower than those of S-NPP VIIRS. The averages of the linear fit values of the N20 to S-NPP VIIRS from 2018 to 2020 June are - 1.97%, -4.99%, -3.36%, and -0.85% for M4, M5, M7, and DNB, respectively. Our results indicate that the S-NPP and N20 VIIRS DNB and M bands calibration have been stable. The cross-sensor differences in DNB and M bands are generally consistent with other independent studies using similar and different approaches.
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