The Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) on NASA’s Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, and ocean Ecosystem (PACE) mission has been providing data to the science community since April 2024. OCI is a hyperspectral imager, providing almost daily global coverage, at a spatial resolution of 1.2km. Its design specifications were optimized for ocean color and atmospheric applications, but terrestrial studies could benefit from its hyperspectral coverage as well. The ocean color requirements called for very high radiometric accuracy, which could benefit a wide variety of applications. This paper presents results from the first 6 months of on-orbit calibration and characterization measurements, including absolute calibration, spectral registration, temporal trending of radiometric sensitivity, signal to noise ratio, and linearity, with a focus on the commissioning results obtained in the first 2 months after launch.
Scheduled to launch in 2024, the Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) onboard the Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud, ocean Ecosystem (PACE) mission will collect hyperspectral data from 315 nm to 895 nm via two grating spectrometers (in both the blue and red spectral regions) and 9 multi-spectral bands in the short-wave infrared (940 nm to 2260 nm). The increased spectral resolution and radiometric accuracy is expected to improve upon data collected by heritage sensors such as SeaWiFs, MODIS, and VIIRS, allowing new applications in ocean color, aerosol, and cloud science. During ground testing, higher than expected spatial-spectral crosstalk was measured for the hyperspectral bands in the blue spectrograph. Using a monochromatic-collimated light source, light from a single science pixel (1km x 1km) was found to produce crosstalk signals over 31 pixels in the cross-track direction. This spatial augmentation is caused by the spectral crosstalk’s asynchronous spatial movement during Time Delay Integration (TDI). To fully characterized the magnitude and spectral dependency from this, a crosstalk model was developed by synthesizing data collected from monochromatic-collimated light and monochromatic light that filled the OCI optical aperture. The model was validated by showing good agreement between predicted values and other relevant test data collected using both monochromatic and white light sources.
KEYWORDS: Short wave infrared radiation, Point spread functions, Sensors, Modulation transfer functions, Charge-coupled devices, CCD image sensors, Telescopes, Signal detection
The OCI (Ocean Color Instrument) is the main sensor on the upcoming PACE (Plankton Aerosol Cloud ocean Ecosystem) mission. OCI has two hyperspectral CCD sensors covering 340nm to 885nm and 9 SWIR (Short Wave IR) bands from 940nm to 2260nm. SWIR bands have nominal 1km ground pixel size and CCD bands have native 1/8 km ground pixel size in diagnostic mode that will be aggregated into 1km pixels to improve SNR and meet the data rate constraints. OCI has a rotating telescope that is synchronized to the readout of the CCD and SWIR detectors. Full pre-launch system level testing for the OCI ETU (Engineering Test Unit) was completed in June 2021. With time-delayed scan mode, a sub-pixel level time-delay step is applied to the detector readout. This sub-pixel level time-delay step causes a sub-pixel level shift in the start of the data collection. After collecting time-delay step scans with different step sizes, a scan profile with sub-pixel resolution can be constructed. 1/8 and 1/4 of CCD pixel resolutions were achieved using this mode. In this paper, the OCI time-delayed scan mode will be described as well as how it was used to calculate OCI’s high spatial resolution PSF (Point Spread Function), IFOV (instantaneous Field of View), MTF (Modulation Transfer Function), and BBR (Band to Band Registration).
The Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) is the primary sensor on the upcoming Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud ocean Ecosystem (PACE) mission. OCI is a new type of sensor compared to NASA’s ocean color heritage sensors VIIRS, MODIS, and SeaWiFs. Unlike its heritage sensors, OCI has two slit grating hyperspectral spectrographs in addition to a fiber-coupled multiband filter spectrograph. The two hyperspectral spectrographs provide continuous coverage from 340nm to 885nm in the UV to NIR range. These spectrographs use programmable CCD detectors that aggregate multiple CCD pixels that can effectively provide various spectral resolutions. The fiber-coupled multiband filter spectrograph provides seven discrete spectral bands from 940nm to 2260nm. OCI completed system level testing of the Engineering Test Unit (ETU) in June 2021 at the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC). The ETU contains one of the slit grating spectrographs (600nm to 885nm) and the fiber-coupled spectrograph. The ETU was tested in thermal vacuum (TVAC) in February 2020 and January 2021 to assess characterization and performance compliance to design requirements. This paper presents an overview of the spectral performance of the OCI ETU for relative spectral response (RSR), integrated Out-of-Band response (IOOB), system gain, band centers, and bandwidths.
The Plankton Aerosol Cloud ocean Ecosystem (PACE) Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) has completed the ground test program for its engineering unit (ETU) and testing of the flight unit will begin in the near future. OCI is a grating spectrometer with hyperspectral coverage from about 340 nm to 885 nm with 9 additional filtered channels in the SWIR. Two CCDs are used as detectors for the hyperspectral channels. One important operating mode of the CCDs on OCI is progressive time delay integration (or PTDI). In this mode, the charge in the CCD can be held for multiples of the nominal integration times. A series of these measurements can be made with progressively increasing multiples of the nominal integration time as the instrument scans across a uniform source. Ground testing with this operating mode on OCI ETU has shown promising results. This work will present measurements taken with the PTDI mode and the analysis of OCI ETU linearity and dynamic range.
The Plankton, Aerosol, Cloud ocean Ecosystem (PACE) mission Ocean Color Instrument (OCI) is the next generation ocean color sensor following on from the SeaWiFS and VIIRS designs, to be launched into low Earth orbit in 2022. Like those heritage sensors, OCI has cross track scanning fore-optics, the reflectivity of which (referred to here as the response versus scan angle or RVS) must be characterized prior to launch. The expected test setup, component reflectivity measurements, instrument model, and heritage sensor testing were used to generate simulated RVS data. This simulated data set was then used to verify the functionality of the analysis software in preparation for the upcoming ground test campaign. The analysis software is designed to characterize the RVS for all OCI bands over the full range of scan angles to be measured on orbit as well as verify compliance with the sensor design requirements in near real-time.
Access to the requested content is limited to institutions that have purchased or subscribe to SPIE eBooks.
You are receiving this notice because your organization may not have SPIE eBooks access.*
*Shibboleth/Open Athens users─please
sign in
to access your institution's subscriptions.
To obtain this item, you may purchase the complete book in print or electronic format on
SPIE.org.
INSTITUTIONAL Select your institution to access the SPIE Digital Library.
PERSONAL Sign in with your SPIE account to access your personal subscriptions or to use specific features such as save to my library, sign up for alerts, save searches, etc.