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Level0 to Level1B processor for MethaneAIR.

Authors :
Conway, Eamon K.
Souri, Amir H.
Benmergui, Joshua
Sun, Kang
Liu, Xiong
Staebell, Carly
Chan Miller, Christopher
Franklin, Jonathan
Samra, Jenna
Wilzewski, Jonas
Roche, Sebastien
Luo, Bingkun
Chulakadabba, Apisada
Sargent, Maryann
Hohl, Jacob
Daube, Bruce
Gordon, Iouli
Chance, Kelly
Wofsy, Steven
Source :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques. 2024, Vol. 17 Issue 4, p1347-1362. 16p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

This work presents the development of the MethaneAIR Level0–Level1B processor, which converts raw L0 data to calibrated and georeferenced L1B data. MethaneAIR is the airborne simulator for MethaneSAT, a new satellite under development by MethaneSAT LLC, a subsidiary of the Environmental Defense Fund (EDF). MethaneSAT's goals are to precisely map over 80 % of the production sources of methane from oil and gas fields across the globe to an accuracy of 2–4 ppb on a 2 km 2 scale. Efficient algorithms have been developed to perform dark corrections, estimate the noise, radiometrically calibrate data, and correct stray light. A forward model integrated into the L0–L1B processor is demonstrated to retrieve wavelength shifts during flight accurately. It is also shown to characterize the instrument spectral response function (ISRF) changes occurring at each sampled spatial footprint. We demonstrate fast and accurate orthorectification of MethaneAIR data in a three-step process: (i) initial orthorectification of all observations using aircraft avionics, a simple camera model, and a medium-resolution digital elevation map; (ii) registration of oxygen (O 2) channel grayscale images to reference Multispectral Instrument (MSI) band 11 imagery via Accelerated-KAZE (A-KAZE) feature extraction and linear transformation, with similar co-registration of methane (CH 4) channel grayscale images to the registered O 2 channel images; and finally (iii) optimization of the aircraft position and attitude to the registered imagery and calculation of viewing geometry. This co-registration technique accurately orthorectifies each channel to the referenced MSI imagery. However, in the pixel domain, radiance data for each channel are offset by almost 150–200 across-track pixels (rows) and need to be aligned for the full-physics or proxy retrievals where both channels are simultaneously used. We leveraged our orthorectification tool to identify tie points with similar geographic locations in both CH 4 and O 2 images in order to produce shift parameters in the across-track and along-track dimensions. These algorithms described in this article will be implemented into the MethaneSAT L0–L1B processor. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
18671381
Volume :
17
Issue :
4
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
175943258
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-17-1347-2024