Publications

Hulley, GC; Malakar, NK; Islam, T; Freepartner, RJ (2018). NASA's MODIS and VIIRS Land Surface Temperature and Emissivity Products: A Long-Term and Consistent Earth System Data Record. IEEE JOURNAL OF SELECTED TOPICS IN APPLIED EARTH OBSERVATIONS AND REMOTE SENSING, 11(2), 522-535.

Abstract
Land surface temperature and emissivity (LST&E) determine the total amount of upward long-wave infrared radiation emitted from the Earth's surface, making them key variables in a wide range of studies, including climate variability, land cover/use change, and the energy balance between the land and the atmosphere. LST&E products are currently produced on a routine basis using data from the MODIS instruments on the NASA EOS platforms and by the VIIRS instrument on the Suomi-NPP platform that serves as a bridge between NASA EOS and the nextgeneration JPSS platforms. Two new NASA LST&E products for MODIS (MxD21) and VIIRS (VNP21) will be produced during 2017 using a new approach that addresses discrepancies in accuracy and consistency between the current suite of MODIS and VIIRS LST split-window-based products. The new approach uses a temperature emissivity separation (TES) algorithm, originally developed for the ASTER instrument, to physically retrieve both LST and spectral emissivity consistently for both sensors with high accuracy and well-defined uncertainties. This study demonstrates continuity between the new MYD21 and VNP21 LST products at the <+/- 0.5 K level, with differences that are invariant to environmental conditions and land cover type. Furthermore, MYD21 and VNP21 retrieved emissivities matched closely in magnitude and temporal variation to within 1%-2% over two land validation sites consisting of quartz sands and grassland. Continuity between the new suite of MODIS and VIIRS LST&E products will ensure a consistent and well-characterized long-term LST&E data record for better monitoring and understanding trends in Earth system behavior.

DOI:
10.1109/JSTARS.2017.2779330

ISSN:
1939-1404