Paper
17 January 2002 Radiometric calibration validation of the Hyperion instrument using ground truth at a site in Lake Frome, Australia
Pamela Barry, Peter J. Jarecke, Jay Pearlman, David Jupp, Jenny Lovell, S. Campbell
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Abstract
The Hyperion instrument mounted on the EO-1 spacecraft was launched November 21, 2000 into an orbit following LANDSAT-7 by 1 minute. Hyperion has a 7.5 km swath width, a 30 meter ground resolution and 10 nm spectral resolution extending from 400 nm to 2500 nm. The first portion of the mission was used to measure and characterize the on-orbit radiometric, spectral, image quality and geometric performance of the instrument. Lake Frome, a dry salt lake in South Australia was chosen as a calibration site for Hyperion. Surface spectral data were collected along a transect through the center of the lake prior to the Hyperion overpass. This paper discusses the incorporation of the Lake Frome ground measurements and analysis into the performance verification of the instrument.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Pamela Barry, Peter J. Jarecke, Jay Pearlman, David Jupp, Jenny Lovell, and S. Campbell "Radiometric calibration validation of the Hyperion instrument using ground truth at a site in Lake Frome, Australia", Proc. SPIE 4480, Imaging Spectrometry VII, (17 January 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.453346
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Cited by 11 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Calibration

Short wave infrared radiation

Atmospheric modeling

Space operations

Atmospheric propagation

Reflectivity

Spectral resolution

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