Alexandria Digital Research Library

Improved surface temperature estimates with MASTER/AVIRIS sensor fusion

Author:
Grigsby, Erik Shane Philbert
Degree Grantor:
University of California, Santa Barbara. Geography
Degree Supervisor:
Dar A. Roberts
Place of Publication:
[Santa Barbara, Calif.]
Publisher:
University of California, Santa Barbara
Creation Date:
2014
Issued Date:
2014
Topics:
Remote Sensing and Engineering, Agricultural
Keywords:
Thermal infrared
HyspIRI
Water vapor scaling
Land surface temperature
Canopy temperature
Validation
Genres:
Online resources and Dissertations, Academic
Dissertation:
M.A.--University of California, Santa Barbara, 2014
Description:

Land surface temperature (LST) is an important parameter in many ecological studies, where processes such as evapotranspiration have impacts at temperature gradients less than 1 K. The current Root Mean Square Errors (RMSE) in standard MODIS and ASTER LST products are greater than 1 K, and for ASTER can be as large as 4 K for graybody pixels such as vegetation. Errors of 3 to 8 K have been observed for ASTER in humid conditions, making knowledge of atmospheric water vapor content critical in retrieving accurate LST. For this reason improved accuracy in LST measurements through the synthesis of visible-to-shortwave-infrared (VSWIR) derived water vapor maps and Thermal-Infrared (TIR) data is one goal of the Hyperspectral Infrared Imager, or HyspIRI, mission. The 2011 ER-2 Delano/Lost Hills flights acquired data with both the MODIS/ASTER Simulator (MASTER) and Airborne Visible InfraRed Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS) instruments flown concurrently. This study compares LST retrieval accuracies from the standard JPL MASTER temperature products produced using the Temperature Emissivity Separation (TES) algorithm, and the Water Vapor Scaling (WVS) atmospheric correction method proposed for HyspIRI. The two retrieval methods are run both with and without high spatial resolution AVIRIS-derived water vapor maps to assess the improvement from VSWIR synthesis. We find improvement using VSWIR derived water vapor maps in both cases, with the WVS method being most accurate overall. For closed canopy agricultural vegetation we observed canopy temperature retrieval RMSEs of 0.49 K and 0.70 K using the WVS method on MASTER data with and without AVIRIS derived water vapor,respectively.

Physical Description:
1 online resource (53 pages)
Format:
Text
Collection(s):
UCSB electronic theses and dissertations
ARK:
ark:/48907/f3v9866v
ISBN:
9781321349467
Catalog System Number:
990045117010203776
Rights:
Inc.icon only.dark In Copyright
Copyright Holder:
Erik Grigsby
File Description
Access: Public access
Grigsby_ucsb_0035N_12301.pdf pdf (Portable Document Format)