Assessment of water vapor content from MIVIS TIR data
Main Article Content
Abstract
The main objective of land remotely sensed images is to derive biological, chemical and physical parameters
by inverting sample sets of spectral data. For the above aim hyperspectral scanners on airborne platform are a
powerful remote sensing instrument for both research and environmental applications because of their spectral
resolution and the high operability of the platform. Fine spectral information by MIVIS (airborne hyperspectral
scanner operating in 102 channels ranging from VIS to TIR) allows researchers to characterize atmospheric
parameters and their effects on measured data which produce undesirable features on surface spectral signatures.
These effects can be estimated (and remotely sensed radiances corrected) if atmospheric spectral transmittance
is known at each image pixel. Usually ground-based punctual observations (atmospheric sounding balloons,
sun photometers, etc.) are used to estimate the main physical parameters (like water vapor and temperature
profiles) which permit us to estimate atmospheric spectral transmittance by using suitable radiative transfer
model and a specific (often too strong) assumption which enable atmospheric properties measured only in
very few points to be extended to the whole image. Several atmospheric gases produce observable absorption
features, but only water vapor strongly varies in time and space. In this work the authors customize a self-sufficient
«split-window technique» to derive (at each image pixel) atmospheric total columnar water vapor content
(TWVC) using only MIVIS data collected by the fourth MIVIS spectrometer (Thermal Infrared band).
MIVIS radiances have been simulated by means of MODTRAN4 radiative transfer code and the coefficients of
linear regression to estimate TWVC from «split-windows» MIVIS radiances, based on 450 atmospheric water
vapor profiles obtained by radiosonde data provided by NOAA\NESDIS. The method has been applied to produce
maps describing the spatial variability of the water vapor columnar content along a trial scene. The procedure
has been validated by means of the MIVIS data acquired over Venice and the contemporary radiosonde
data. A discrepancy within 5% has been measured between the estimate of TWVC derived from the proposed
self-sufficient split-window technique and the coincident radiosonde measurements. If confirmed by further
analyses such a result will permit us to fully exploit MIVIS TIR capability to offer a more effective (at image
pixel level) and self-sufficient (no ancillary observations required) way to obtain atmospherically corrected
MIVIS radiances.
by inverting sample sets of spectral data. For the above aim hyperspectral scanners on airborne platform are a
powerful remote sensing instrument for both research and environmental applications because of their spectral
resolution and the high operability of the platform. Fine spectral information by MIVIS (airborne hyperspectral
scanner operating in 102 channels ranging from VIS to TIR) allows researchers to characterize atmospheric
parameters and their effects on measured data which produce undesirable features on surface spectral signatures.
These effects can be estimated (and remotely sensed radiances corrected) if atmospheric spectral transmittance
is known at each image pixel. Usually ground-based punctual observations (atmospheric sounding balloons,
sun photometers, etc.) are used to estimate the main physical parameters (like water vapor and temperature
profiles) which permit us to estimate atmospheric spectral transmittance by using suitable radiative transfer
model and a specific (often too strong) assumption which enable atmospheric properties measured only in
very few points to be extended to the whole image. Several atmospheric gases produce observable absorption
features, but only water vapor strongly varies in time and space. In this work the authors customize a self-sufficient
«split-window technique» to derive (at each image pixel) atmospheric total columnar water vapor content
(TWVC) using only MIVIS data collected by the fourth MIVIS spectrometer (Thermal Infrared band).
MIVIS radiances have been simulated by means of MODTRAN4 radiative transfer code and the coefficients of
linear regression to estimate TWVC from «split-windows» MIVIS radiances, based on 450 atmospheric water
vapor profiles obtained by radiosonde data provided by NOAA\NESDIS. The method has been applied to produce
maps describing the spatial variability of the water vapor columnar content along a trial scene. The procedure
has been validated by means of the MIVIS data acquired over Venice and the contemporary radiosonde
data. A discrepancy within 5% has been measured between the estimate of TWVC derived from the proposed
self-sufficient split-window technique and the coincident radiosonde measurements. If confirmed by further
analyses such a result will permit us to fully exploit MIVIS TIR capability to offer a more effective (at image
pixel level) and self-sufficient (no ancillary observations required) way to obtain atmospherically corrected
MIVIS radiances.
Article Details
How to Cite
Bassani, C., Cuomo, V., Lanorte, V., Pignatti, S. and Tramutoli, V. (2006) “Assessment of water vapor content from MIVIS TIR data”, Annals of Geophysics, 49(1). doi: 10.4401/ag-3162.
Issue
Section
OLD
Open-Access License
No Permission Required
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia applies the Creative Commons Attribution License (CCAL) to all works we publish.
Under the CCAL, authors retain ownership of the copyright for their article, but authors allow anyone to download, reuse, reprint, modify, distribute, so long as the original authors and source are cited. No permission is required from the authors or the publishers.
In most cases, appropriate attribution can be provided by simply citing the original article.
If the item you plan to reuse is not part of a published article (e.g., a featured issue image), then please indicate the originator of the work, and the volume, issue, and date of the journal in which the item appeared. For any reuse or redistribution of a work, you must also make clear the license terms under which the work was published.
This broad license was developed to facilitate open access to, and free use of, original works of all types. Applying this standard license to your own work will ensure your right to make your work freely and openly available. For queries about the license, please contact ann.geophys@ingv.it.