Title: ENVISAT: The AATSR
 1ENVISAT The AATSR validation Program 
 2Presentation
-  Introduction  
-  The AATSR - Presentation  - Instrument 
 specification - Data products -
 Application
-  Calibration 
-  validation -Sea Surface Temperature 
-  -Land Surface 
-  Conclusion
3AATSR Introduction 
- Designed primarily to measure sea surface 
 temperature to lt0.3 K
- Third in a series ATSR-1, ATSR-2, AATSR 
- Funded primarily by the UK DETR 
- Useful for climate modelling and the detection of 
 global change.
4- ATSR-AATSR toward a long term data record for 
 climate studies
-  ERS-1/ATSR1 launched in 1991 
-  Retrieve SKIN SST using a  radiative transfer 
 model  making the SST data set  independent
 from in situ  measurements
-  SST retrieval scheme takes  into account the 
 stratospheric aerosols effects (Mt Pinatubo)
 and high WV content. It makes  the ATSR/AATSR
 accuracy data set unique in the world.
 
Spatially averaged global sea surface temperature 
imagery, for September 2000, from ATSR2. Cold 
waters are shown in purple/blue, whilst warm 
waters are shown in orange/red. 
 5- ATSR-AATSR innovative features  
- Two viewing angles, Nadir-55 deg forward 
-  A novel type of stirling cooler to maintain 
-  the detectors temperature very low, giving 
 very high sensitivity
-  On-board calibration with two black bodies 
 designed for high emissivity, uniformity and
 long term stability.
-  Visible calibration performed once per orbit 
 using a Russian opal diffuser
-  Very good noise performance 
-  Very good geolocation accuracy 
-  High digitization allowing fine structures 
 detection
-  Thanks to ENVISAT improved on board recorder 
 capacity, AATSR will be always in full swath
 and full digitization
False colour daytime image of the US eastern 
seaboard 16 May 1995 (processed at RAL). 
 6Instrument Specifications 
 7AATSR Data Products 
 8ATSR-AATSR applicationsLand/ice
Hot spot in Indonesia detected from the 3.7 µm 
 channel in 1997. 
A recent 12 µm thermal image, taken by ATSR-2 in 
March 2000 showing the break-up of the Ross Ice 
Shelf in the Antarctic. A large iceberg, 300 
km by 40 km is seen breaking away from the main 
ice sheet. (processed at RAL).
Daytime ATSR-2 image of the Middle East, showing 
bands 0.55µm, 0.67µm, and 0.87µm 
 9ATSR-AATSR applicationsSea / ocean / climate
SST anomaly, 1997 El-Nino observed by 
ATSR-2 climate/meteo application
Crete, 1997/07 SST climate, fisheries, pollution 
 10ATSR-AATSR applicationsAtmosphere/aerosol
Stereoscopy (3) Fun (and informative!)
Right eye
Left eye
Stereoscopy effect to be viewed by cross-eyed 
method 
 11ATSR-AATSR Calibration
-  INFRARED CALIBRATION. 
-  AATSR infrared channels are calibrated 
 during each scan using a pair of blackbody
-  calibration targets spanning the expected 
 range of SST one target is cold, typically at
 -10C,
-  and the other hot at around 30C. The 
 infrared calibration is applied automatically
 during the
-  ground processing so users are provided with 
 fully calibrated brightness temperatures.
Visible target calibration
Along track earthview
Black Bodies/IR calibration targets
nadir earthview
Absolute accuracy equivalent to 0.1 K (3s) Black 
bodies designed and manufactured by AEA 
Technology and MSSL
AATSR scan cycle  
 12ATSR-AATSR Calibration
-  VISIBLE CALIBRATION.Calibration of the AATSR 
 visible channels is achieved once per orbit by
 viewing the Sun using a Russian Opal diffuser.
 The radiometric offset is determined by viewing
 the cold black body (dark signal).
-  VISIBLE CHANNEL CALIBRATION AND INSTRUMENT 
 STABILITY.
- The on-board visible channel calibration system 
 on ATSR-2 has worked extremely well. Smith et al.
 (1997) has used a long series of observations
 from the South Eastern Libyan Desert to
 characterize the drift..
- Desert sites, such as this one in Libya, with 
 their uniform surfaces, are ideal sites for
 calibration/validation measurements
-  
13ATSR-AATSR Calibration
Libyan site, ATSR-2 image processed at RAL 
(Smith)  
 14ATSR-AATSR Calibration
- The on-board calibration system for the 
 reflection channels
-  shall provide a known source of radiance over 
 the AATSR
-  reflection channel ranges to an absolute 
 accuracy of 5.
- The thermal IR channels shall measure the 
 radiance to an accuracy
-  equivalent to a temperature error less than 0.1 
 K.
-  The radiometric noise shall be less than 0.08 K 
 at 3.7 and less than
-  0.05 K at 11 and 12 micrometers channels for a 
 scene temperature of 270 K.
- Pre-launch end to end calibration has been 
 performed. It shows good  results.
15AATSR Calibration / algorithm verification
-  AATSR is a selfcalibrating instrument. As such, 
 calibration of the instrument after launch is not
 required.
-  There will, however, be specific activities to 
 check and characterise the instrument
 post-launch.
-  - Algorithm verification data processing 
 algorithms are verified and fine- tuned. That
 includes
-  gt geolocation gt re-gridding process 
-  gt land-flagging 
-  gt cloud flagging 
-  gt spatial averaging 
-  gt SST / NDVI retrieval 
-  gt formatting of output product 
-  - The vicarious calibration of the visible 
 channels, can be classified as either
 calibration or validation. Within the AATSR
 validation program, vicarious cal/val is
 treated under the title of validation.
16AATSR Validation
- The process of assessing by independent means, 
 the quality of the data products derived from
 system outputs
-  Is AATSR returning acceptable measurements 
 and meeting its specifications?
- AATSR validation is performed under the 
 coordination of Marianne Edwards from Leicester
 University.
-  Validation the core validation program will 
 validate the- Level 1b product (GBTR),
 primarily over land.
-  - Level 2 product, sea surface temperature. 
17AATSR Core Validation 
- Sea Surface Temperature 
- 2 type of products 
-  - Gridded sea surface temperature product 
-  - Spatially averaged sea surface temperature 
 product
- Three levels 
- - Global buoy data, and the early indication of 
 gross errors in ASST (general measurements)
- - Spot values for gridded data (moderate 
 accuracy)
- - Precision measurements (high accuracy)
18AATSR Core Validation early indication of gross 
errors 
- ASST data 
- Systematic review of buoy data 
- Comparison with SST analysis fields 
- Inexpensive, global scale, routine basis 
- Early indication of gross errors 
- UK Met. Office/Hadley Centre/RAL/Meteo-France
19AATSR Core Validation early indication of gross 
errors 
Location of buoys used to create a matchup 
database for SST (meteo-France) 
 20AATSR Core Validation Spot values for gridded 
data 
- Autonomous measurements on board 
 ships-of-opportunity.
- Bolted onto merchant ships of ferries. 
- Good coverage, good quality. 
- Low cost. 
- Dr Ian Barton will co-ordinate validation 
 activities in Australia. - One activity uses a
 Tasco radiometer to collect measures of  SST
 along the Perth coast.- Other activity uses
 Everest Radiometer. It will operate between
 Townsville and Kelso reef on the Great Barrier
 Reef.
- ISAR, designed by C.Donlon (JRC), will be 
 installed on the Brittany Ferry operating between
 Porthmouth and Le Havre.The operation will be
 coordinated by Ian Robinson (SOC).
21(No Transcript) 
 22AATSR Core Validation precision measurements
- Precision measurements using specifically 
 designed radiometers.
- Fewer data points and more limited coverage. 
- Very accurate. 
- Example Instruments - SISTeR (RAL). Already 
 Used for ATSR-1/2.- M-AERI (RSMAS, Peter
 Minnett).- DAR011(CSIRO, Ian Barton).
-  IR sensor validation and Intercalibration 
 Workshop held at Miami (end May). it should
 provide with a high level of confidence for the
 AATSR Envisat validation results.---gt
 Presentation from Ian Barton.
23The SISTeR (Scanning Infrared Sea Surface 
Temperature Radiometer) is a compact and robust 
chopped self-calibrating filter radiometer. It 
measures approximately 20  20  40cm and weighs 
about 20kg. The instrument is divided into three 
compartments containing the foreoptics, scan 
mirror and reference black bodies, and a 
small-format PC with signal processing and 
control electronics. 
SISTeR mounted on board the foremast of a boat 
used in the MUBEX campaign. 
 24Land Surface Validation 
- Level 1b GBTR product 
- Vicarious validation 
- Uniform sites, stable over time 
- Libyan Desert, Greenland, China 
- RAL/CNES/KNMI 
- Specific validation campaigns, and the collection 
 of ground-based measurements
-  - Australian validation campaigns (CSIRO, Fred 
 Prata).
-  3 sites, Thangoo, Amburla, Hay, 
 representing different environmental conditions
 and land cover type.
25Land Surface Validation 
Amburla site Australia
Thangoo site Australia 
 26Conclusion
- ATSR1/2-AATSR SST long time series. 
- Very high accuracy responding to the 
 climate/ocean community needs.
- Validation plan integrated involves variety of 
 different projects.
- Integrated into the ENVISAT validation programme. 
- Validation Rehearsal, Oct/Nov 2000. Testing of 
 methods and communication channels. 2nd
 rehearsal, June 2001.
- NILU validation database 
- Launch in Sep/Oct 2001 (2nd Oct). 
- Commissioning phase workshop. L6. 
- Validation workshop L9. Each PI will present 
 validation results and conclusion drawn.
- Validation loop set up (currently under revision 
 by DETR/ESA).
- Long term validation increase number of sites 
 and season, monitor long term data product
 quality, validate new product.
-