Paper
17 January 2002 Hyperion on-orbit validation of spectral calibration using atmospheric lines and an on-board system
Pamela Barry, John Shepanski, Carol Segal
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Abstract
The Hyperion instrument mounted on the EO-1 spacecraft was launched November 21, 2000 into an orbit following LANDSAT-7 by 1 minute. Hyperion has a 7.5 km swath width, a 30 meter ground resolution and 220 spectral bands. Its spectral bands extend from 400 nm to 2500 nm with each band having about a 10 nm bandwidth. A unique process to validate the spectral calibration was developed. The process was based on an atmospheric limb collect and supported with a solar calibration collect. The data contained a collection of solar lines, atmospheric lines and absorption lines from the paint that coats the solar calibration reflectance panel. Correlating the positions of these lines with reference data, the center wavelength of each pixel across the field of view for the VNIR and SWIR spectral regions of the imaging spectrometer has been verified. In this paper we discuss the data collection and the technique applied to the VNIR and SWIR focal plane array.
© (2002) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Pamela Barry, John Shepanski, and Carol Segal "Hyperion on-orbit validation of spectral calibration using atmospheric lines and an on-board system", Proc. SPIE 4480, Imaging Spectrometry VII, (17 January 2002); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.453344
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CITATIONS
Cited by 25 scholarly publications and 1 patent.
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KEYWORDS
Calibration

Spectral calibration

Short wave infrared radiation

Atmospheric modeling

Reflectivity

Oxygen

Spectroscopy

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