Publications

Li, YH; Xiong, XX; McIntire, J; Angal, A; Gusev, S; Chiang, K (2019). Early Calibration and Performance Assessments of NOAA-20 VIIRS Thermal Emissive Bands. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON GEOSCIENCE AND REMOTE SENSING, 57(11), 9242-9251.

Abstract
The Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS) sensor aboard the NOAA-20 (previously JPSS-1) spacecraft has successfully operated since its launch in November, 2017. Similar to the first VIIRS instrument on the Suomi-National Polar-orbiting Partnership (SNPP) spacecraft, the data are collected in 22 spectral bands that are calibrated by a set of onboard calibrators. This paper provides an overview of the NOAA-20 VIIRS on-orbit operation and calibration, with a particular focus on the thermal emissive bands (TEBs). The results presented in this paper include the on-orbit changes in the TEB spectral band responses, detector noise characterization, and key calibration parameters, such as the nonlinear coefficients derived from the blackbody warm-up cool-down cycles. Other issues, such as the early mission long-wave infrared (LWIR) response degradation due to icing on the dewar window, and their impact on sensor calibration are also discussed. Since launch, the VIIRS instrument temperature has been stable to within 0.8 K and the cold focal plane temperatures are well controlled with variations less than 40 mK. With the exception of the early degradation observed in the LWIR bands, the TEB gains have been stable to within 0.04 (except I5 at 0.07). Based on the current performance, VIIRS is expected to meet its calibration requirements throughout its design lifetime.

DOI:
10.1109/TGRS.2019.2925782

ISSN:
0196-2892