Paper
7 January 2004 Modification of the ocean PHILLS hyperspectral imager for the International Space Station and the HyGEIA program
Michael R. Corson, Jeffrey H. Bowles, Wei Chen, Curtiss O. Davis, Clinton E. Dorris, Kiera H. Gallelli, Daniel R. Korwan, Lisa A. Policastri
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Naval Research Laboratory and the Boeing Company have teamed to fly the NRL ocean Portable Hyperspectral Imager for Low Light Spectroscopy (ocean PHILLS) on board the International Space Station (ISS). This joint program is named the Hyperspectral Sensor for Global Environmental Imaging and Analysis (HyGEIA). Hyperspectral images spanning the wavelength range 400 to 1000 nm will be collected at a ground sample distance of 25 m, with 10 nm spectral binning, and 200 to 1 signal to noise over the visible wavelengths for a 5% albedo scene. These images will be used to characterize the coastal ocean and littoral zone, crops, and forest areas. The PHILLS will also image over the same wavelength range at 130 m GSD to produce similar environmental products over a larger ground area. This paper will describe the modification of PHILLS required for use on the ISS, the modeled on orbit performance, and the planned on orbit configuration.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Michael R. Corson, Jeffrey H. Bowles, Wei Chen, Curtiss O. Davis, Clinton E. Dorris, Kiera H. Gallelli, Daniel R. Korwan, and Lisa A. Policastri "Modification of the ocean PHILLS hyperspectral imager for the International Space Station and the HyGEIA program", Proc. SPIE 5159, Imaging Spectrometry IX, (7 January 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.509902
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Cited by 5 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Imaging systems

Hyperspectral imaging

Signal to noise ratio

Motion models

Cameras

Spectroscopy

Analytical research

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