Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2,...

20
Summary of Terra and Aqua Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1 , Brian Wenny 2 , Sri Madhaven 2 , Amit Angal 3 , William Barnes 4 , and Vincent Salomonson 5 1. NASA /GSFC; 2. Sigma Space Corp; 3. SSAI; 4. UMBC; 5. U. of Utah Other Contributors: Members of MCST IGARSS 2011, July 24-29, 2011, Vancouver, Canada EOS

Transcript of Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2,...

Page 1: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term PerformanceLong-term Performance

Jack Xiong1, Brian Wenny2, Sri Madhaven2, Amit Angal3,

William Barnes4, and Vincent Salomonson5

1. NASA /GSFC; 2. Sigma Space Corp; 3. SSAI; 4. UMBC; 5. U. of Utah

Other Contributors: Members of MCST

IGARSS 2011, July 24-29, 2011, Vancouver, Canada

EOS

Page 2: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

• MODIS– Terra and Aqua

• On-orbit Operation and Calibration Activities

• On-orbit Performance– Instrument, Focal Plane Assembly (FPA)

– On-board Calibrators (OBC)

– Radiometric, Spectral, Spatial, and Geometric

• Summary

Page 2

Outline

Page 3: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Aqua

Terra Terra: over 11 years of successful operationAqua: over 9 years of successful operation

MODIS observations:

36 spectral bands: 0.41 to

14.5 m (VIS to LWIR)

3 spatial resolutions: 0.25,

0.5, and 1 km

Nearly 40 data products for

land, ocean, and atmospheric

applications

Page 3

Terra and Aqua MODIS

Page 4: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

• Terra MODIS– A-side: launch to Oct 30, 2000– B-side: Oct 30, 2000 to June 15, 2001– A-side: July 02, 2001 to Sept 17, 2002– A-side electronics & B-side formatter: Sept 17, 2002 to

present– BB temperatures set at 290K– Cold FPA controlled at 83K

• Aqua MODIS – B-side: launch to present– BB temperatures set at 285K– Cold FPA controlled at 83K

On-orbit Operation and Calibration Activities

Page 4

No changes to instrument operational configurations in recent years

Page 5: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

On-orbit Calibration Activities

SDSM

Scan Mirror

SolarDiffuser

SRCA

Blackbody

SpaceView

SD/SDSM:Weekly to tri-

weekly

SRCA:Radiometric:

monthlySpatial: bi-

monthlySpectral: quarterly

Moon: monthly (nighttime orbits)0-20o spacecraft roll maneuvers55o phase angle

BB: quarterly WUCDSpacecraft maneuvers:

Yaw (SD BRF, VF)Roll (Moon)Pitch (only applied to

Terra) Page 5

Page 6: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

On-orbit Calibration Activities

Page 6

SD / SDSM

MOONBB

WUCDSRCA RAD

SRCA SPEC

SRCA SPAT

Terra 325 103 76 135 48 63

Aqua 216 83 39 107 27 45

Frequencies to operate on-board calibrators are gradually reduced for both Terra and Aqua MODIS as a result of their extended missions

Spacecraft Maneuvers:Yaw (SD BRF, VF), Roll (Moon), Pitch (only applied to Terra)

Ground Calibration Targets:Dome C and Desert Sites

As of June 30, 2011

Page 7: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

• Temperatures (Instrument and FPA)

• On-board Calibrators (BB and SD)

• Radiometric

• Spectral

• Spatial

• Geometric

Performance

Page 7

Page 8: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Instrument Temperatures

Page 8

3.5 K increase over 11 years 2.0 K increase over 9 years

T-MODIS A-MODIS

Similar trends for warm FPA, scan cavity, and mirror temperatures

VIS, NIR

T-MODIS A-MODIS

VIS, NIR

Page 9: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Cold FPA Temperatures

Page 9

T-MODIS A-MODISSMIR, LWIR SMIR, LWIR

Short-term: granule averaged

Extremely stable

Short-term: granule averaged

Less stable (recent loss of cooler margin)

Page 10: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Blackbody Temperatures (nominal operation)

Page 10

B-Side

Short-term: granule averaged Short-term: granule averaged

< 30 mK increase over 11 yr

T-MODIS A-MODIS

Extremely stable

Aqua MODIS BB performance is extremely stable (long- and short-term)

Page 11: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Solar Diffuser (SD) Degradation

Page 11

Larger degradation at shorter ; More SD degradation in Terra MODIS

Increased SD degradation due to SD door fixed at “open” position

SD degradation as a function of wavelength

T-MODIS A-MODIS

SD degradation (mission-long trend)

Gradually reduced SD calibration frequency as mission continues

Page 12: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

On-orbit Changes in RSB (VIS, NIR, and SWIR) Responses

Page 12Wavelength, angle of incidence (AOI), and mirror side dependent

Page 13: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

On-orbit Changes in TEB (MWIR and LWIR) Responses

Page 13

Excluding changes due to use of different operational configurations, changes in TEB responses are relatively small (compared to RSB); PV bands (20-25 and 27-30) are more stable than PC bands (31-36)

Page 14: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Detector Characterization

Page 14

• 36 spectral bands: 490 individual detectors– Terra MODIS

– 45 noisy detectors (30 from pre-launch; 35 at launch)

– No inoperable detectors

– Aqua MODIS

– 6 noisy detectors (2 from pre-launch; 3 at launch)

– 15 inoperable detectors (13 in band 6 and most since pre-launch and/or at launch)

– There are no new noisy and inoperable detectors in recent years

Page 15: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

On-orbit Changes in Spectral Band CW and BW

Page 15

Aqua MODIS on-orbit changes in both CW and BW are less than 0.5 nm for most VIS/NIR spectral bands

Terra MODIS VIS and NIR spectral bands

Changes in center wavelength (CW) are less than 0.5 nm for most VIS/NIR

Changes in bandwidth (BW) are less than 1.0 nm for most VIS/NIR

Page 16: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

On-orbit Changes in Band-to-Band Registration (BBR)

Page 16

Large BBR offsets in A-MODIS between cold FPA and warm FPA band pairs

(a known problem since pre-launch); offsets remain stable

Terra MODIS along-scan BBR

Terra MODIS along-track BBR

Page 17: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

Page 17

Robert Wolfe et al. T-MODIS track RMS: 43/42m (C5/C6); scan RMS: 44/42m (C5/C6)A-MODIS track RMS: 47/45m (C5/C6); scan RMS: 53/51m (C5/C6); and small N/S hemispherical differences

Terra MODIS Geolocation Results

Page 18: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

• Both instruments continue to operate normally

– Stable instrument and warm FPA temperatures

– CFPA temperatures stably controlled at 83K for Terra MODIS; small and slow increase (up to 0.30K) for Aqua MODIS CFPA temperatures

• All on-board calibrators continue to provide key design functions

– BB temperatures remain extremely stable for both Terra and Aqua MODIS, short- and long-term

– Terra MODIS SD degradation is much larger than Aqua MODIS

• Radiometric

– Changes in responses are tracked and corrected in L1B calibration; other effect could exist due to large changes in VIS responses

• Spectral and Spatial

– Stable performance for both Terra and Aqua

– No change to large BBR offsets in Aqua MODIS for band pairs between CFPA and WFPA (a known problem since pre-launch)

Summary

Page 18

Page 19: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

• Large changes in VIS spectral band/detector response

• Large SD degradation at short wavelengths, especially in Terra MODIS

• Aqua MODIS CFPA temperature stability (decrease of cooler margin)

• Calibration consistency between Terra and Aqua MODIS (scene dependent differences: offsets and trends)

• MODIS lessons and experience for future missions

Challenges

Page 19

EOS

Page 20: Summary of Terra and Aqua MODIS Long-term Performance Jack Xiong 1, Brian Wenny 2, Sri Madhaven 2, Amit Angal 3, William Barnes 4, and Vincent Salomonson.

MODIS Specifications and Applications

– 20 reflective solar bands (RSB: bands 1-19, and 26) from 0.41 - 2.2m– 16 thermal emissive bands (TEB: bands 20-25, 27-36) from 3.5 - 14.4m Page 20