Simple aerosol correction technique based on the spectral relationships of the aerosol multiple-scattering reflectances for atmospheric correction over the oceans SCIE SCOPUS

Cited 21 time in WEB OF SCIENCE Cited 29 time in Scopus
Title
Simple aerosol correction technique based on the spectral relationships of the aerosol multiple-scattering reflectances for atmospheric correction over the oceans
Author(s)
Jae-Hyun Ahn; Park, Young-Je; Kim, Wonkook; Lee, Boram
KIOST Author(s)
Ahn, Jae Hyun(안재현)Park, Young Je(박영제)
Alternative Author(s)
안재현; 박영제; 김원국; 이보람
Publication Year
2016-12-26
Abstract
An estimation of the aerosol multiple-scattering reflectance is an important part of the atmospheric correction procedure in satellite ocean color data processing. Most commonly, the utilization of two near-infrared (NIR) bands to estimate the aerosol optical properties has been adopted for the estimation of the effects of aerosols. Previously, the operational Geostationary Color Ocean Imager (GOCI) atmospheric correction scheme relies on a single-scattering reflectance ratio (SSE), which was developed for the processing of the Sea-viewing Wide Field-of-view Sensor (SeaWiFS) data to determine the appropriate aerosol models and their aerosol optical thicknesses. The scheme computes reflectance contributions (weighting factor) of candidate aerosol models in a single scattering domain then spectrally extrapolates the single-scattering aerosol reflectance from NIR to visible (VIS) bands using the SSE. However, it directly applies the weight value to all wavelengths in a multiplescattering domain although the multiple-scattering aerosol reflectance has a non-linear relationship with the single-scattering reflectance and inter-band relationship of multiple scattering aerosol reflectances is non-linear. To avoid these issues, we propose an alternative scheme for estimating the aerosol reflectance that uses the spectral relationships in the aerosol multiple-scattering reflectance between different wavelengths (called SRAMS). The process directly calculates the multiple-scattering reflectance contributions in NIR with no residual errors for selected aerosol models. Then it spectrally extrapolates the reflectance contribution from NIR to visible bands for each selected model using the SRAMS. To assess the performance of the algorithm regarding the errors in the water reflectance at the surface or remote-sensing reflectance retrieval, we compared the SRAMS atmospheric correction results with the SSE atmospheric correction using both simulations and in situ match-ups with the GOCI data. From simulations, the mean errors for bands from 412 to 555 nm were 5.2% for the SRAMS scheme and 11.5% for SSE scheme in case-I waters. From in situ match-ups, 16.5% for the SRAMS scheme and 17.6% scheme for the SSE scheme in both case-I and case-II waters. Although we applied the SRAMS algorithm to the GOCI, it can be applied to other ocean color sensors which have two NIR wavelengths. (C) 2016 Optical Society of America
ISSN
1094-4087
URI
https://sciwatch.kiost.ac.kr/handle/2020.kiost/1370
DOI
10.1364/OE.24.029659
Bibliographic Citation
OPTICS EXPRESS, v.24, no.26, pp.29660 - 29670, 2016
Publisher
OPTICAL SOC AMER
Subject
WATER-LEAVING RADIANCE; CORRECTION ALGORITHM; SURFACE-ROUGHNESS; COLOR SENSORS; SEAWIFS; IMAGER
Type
Article
Language
English
Document Type
Article
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