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Overview of The Resourcesat-1 (IRS-P6)

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U.S.

Department of the Interior


U.S. Geological Survey
Overview of the Resourcesat-1
(IRS-P6)
Overview of the Resourcesat-1
(IRS-P6)
Gyanesh Chander, SAIC
Contract employee under U.S. Geological Survey
contract 03CRCN0001
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Outline
Outline
Background
Orbit and Payload
Sensor Overview
RSR Profiles comparison
Data Products
Conversion to Radiance
References
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IRS Missions
IRS Missions
Bhaskara 1 and 2 : These were experimental remote sensing
satellites launched in Jun 1979 and Nov 1981 respectively
Payload consisted of TV cameras and radiometers
IRS-1A and 1B : Launched in Mar 1988 & Aug 1991 respectively,
these were the first generation, operational remote sensing satellites
The two identical satellites carried Linear Imaging and Self Scanning
sensors (LISS-1 & LISS-II (2)) for providing data in four spectral
bands with a resolution of 72.5m and 36.25m respectively with a
receptivity of 22 days
IRS-P2 : Launched in Oct 1994 using the indigenously developed
Polar Satellite Launch Vehicle (PSLV-D2)
IRS-P2 carried a modified LISS camera
IRS-1C and IRS-1D : Launched in Dec 1995 & Sep 1997 respectively,
are the second generation, operational remote sensing satellite
missions with improved sensor and coverage characteristics
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IRS Missions
IRS Missions
IRS-P3 : Launched in Apr 1996 by the PSLV-D3
The payload consists of two imaging sensors & one non-imaging
sensor
The Wide Field Sensor (WiFS) sensor is providing data with a spatial
resolution of 188m in three spectral bands, in the VNIR regions, with
a swath of 810 Km
The other two sensors on-board are a Modular Opto-electronic
Scanner (MOS) and an X-ray astronomy payload
WiFS and MOS data products are being disseminated to users
OCEANSAT-1 (IRS-P4) : Launched in May 1999
The payload consists of an Ocean Color Monitor (OCM) operating in
eight spectral in the VNIR region and a Multi-frequency Scanning
Microwave Radiometer (MSMR), operating in four frequencies
namely 6.60, 10.61, 18 and 21 GHz
These sensors are providing data for measuring the physical and
biological parameters of oceans
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Resourcesat-1 (IRS P6)
Resourcesat-1 (IRS P6)
The RESOURCSAT-1 satellite was launched in to the polar sun-
synchronous orbit (altitude of 817 km) by PSLV-C5 launch vehicle on
October 17, 2003 with a design life of 5 years
RESOURCSAT-1 is also called IRS-P6
Most advanced Remote Sensing Satellite built by ISRO
Tenth satellite of ISRO in IRS series
Other ISRO operational satellites are IRS 1-C, IRS 1-D, IRS P-2, IRS P-3
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ResourceSat-1 Overview
ResourceSat-1 Overview
RESOURCESAT-1 carries three sensors
High Resolution Linear Imaging Self-Scanner (LISS-IV)
Medium Resolution Linear Imaging Self-Scanner (LISS-III)
Advanced Wide Field Sensor (AWiFS)
All three cameras are push broom scanners using
linear arrays of CCDs
RESOURCESAT-1 also carries an On-board Solid
State Recorder (OBSSR) with a capacity of 120 Giga-
Bits to store the images
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Advanced Wide Field Sensor (AWiFS)
Advanced Wide Field Sensor (AWiFS)
The AWiFS with twin cameras is a moderate-resolution sensor
offering a GSD of 56m at nadir
Quantization: 10 bits
Combined ground swath is 740km with five day repeat cycle
Operates in four spectral bands three VNIR one SWIR
VITAL FACTS:
Instrument: Pushbroom
Bands (4): 0.52-0.59, 0.62-0.68, 0.77-0.86, 1.55-1.70 m
Spatial Resolution: 56 m (near nadir), 70 m (near edge)
Radiometric Resolution: 10 bit
Swath: 740 km
Repeat Time: 5 days
Design Life: 5 years
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AWiFS Sensor Collection Mode
AWiFS Sensor Collection Mode
The AWiFS camera is split into
two separate electro-optic
modules (AWiFS-A and AWiFS-
B) tilted by 11.94 degrees with
respect to nadir
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Medium Resolution Linear Imaging Self-
Scanner (LISS-III)
Medium Resolution Linear Imaging Self-
Scanner (LISS-III)
The LISS-III is a medium resolution sensor offering a GSD of 23.5m
Quantization: 7 bits (SWIR band 10 bits selected 7 transmitted)
Ground swath is 141 km with 24 day repeat cycle
Operates in four spectral bands - three VNIR one SWIR
Each band consists of a separate lens assembly & linear array CCD
The VNIR bands use a 6000 element CCD with pixel size 10x7 microns
The SWIR band uses a 6000 element CCD with pixel size 13x13 microns
The data from the VNIR bands are digitized to 7 bits while the data from
SWIR band are digitized to 10 bit
The VNIR bands could be operated in any one of the four selectable gains by
command, while the SWIR band is configured with single gain setting
covering the full dynamic range
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LISS-III In-flight Calibration
LISS-III In-flight Calibration
The In-flight calibration of the LISS-III camera is
carried out using four LEDs per CCD in VNIR bands
and 6 LEDs for the SWIR band
LEDs are operated in pulsed mode
Pulse duration during which these LEDs are ON is
varied in specific steps
Each LED has a cylindrical lens to distribute the light intensity
onto the CCD
Each calibration cycle consists of 2048 lines providing six non
zero intensity levels
Each intensity level is generated sequentially by LED-1 ON, LED-
2 ON and LED-1 and 2 ON
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High Resolution Linear Imaging Self-
Scanner (LISS-IV)
High Resolution Linear Imaging Self-
Scanner (LISS-IV)
The LISS-IV is the highest-resolution sensor offering a
GSD of 5.8m at nadir
Quantization: 10 bits (selected 7 bits transmitted)
Ground swath is 23 or 70 km with 5 days repeat cycle
Steerable upto +/- 26
o
across track to obtain stereoscopic imagery
Operates in three spectral VNIR bands
A single telescope & lens assembly is used for all bands
Band 3 (red) is placed closest to nadir, while band 2 looks ahead
and band 4 looks behind the satellite velocity vector
The 12000 pixel CCD array for each band is separated
into odd & even pixel, arranged in two rows with a
distance of 35 microns (5 scan lines) between them
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LISS-IV Quantization 7 bits
LISS-IV Quantization 7 bits
The image data is digitized to 10 bits onboard the satellite but
only 7 bits are transferred from satellite to ground
There is a fixed gain setting used to produce the original 10-bit signal
There is no dynamic decision-making on the part of the onboard data
handling system
The selection of which 7 bits to transfer from the 10-bit signal is performed by
the satellite operator during collection tasking
The ground operators select which 7 bits are extracted by specifying one of
four 'gain' settings 0-6, 1-7, 2-8, or 3-9
Sensor metadata provided with the image product indicates what gain
setting (i.e., bit selection) was used for the scene
The product are delivered as 8-bit
The ground processing system applies a 7-bit LUT for radiometric
calibration of the 7 bit data, then they insert a zero bit at the least
significant bit
This pushes the DN range from 0-127 to 2-254
The end-user still end up getting DNs of 1 and 255, however, because of
cubic convolution resampling
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LISS-IV Modes (Mono or Mx)
LISS-IV Modes (Mono or Mx)
The LISS-IV sensor can be operated in either of two modes
In mono mode (Mono), the full swath of 70 km will be covered in any one single band
selectable by ground command
Nominally the red band (B3) is used because it is closest to nadir
The full 12000 pixel array of B3 is used to collect a 70km swath width
In multi-spectral mode (Mx), LISS-IV covers a swath of 23 km (selectable out of 70 km
total swath) in all three bands
In the Mx mode, 4000 pixels are
collected from each of the three bands
Any pixel number from 1 to 8000 can
be chosen as the start of the 4000-pixel
subset, meaning that the 23km wide
multi-spectral scene can fall anywhere
within the Mono 70km footprint
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LISS-IV In-flight Calibration
LISS-IV In-flight Calibration
Pre-launch light transfer characteristics (LTC) of the
overall Payload system are generated in the lab
Performance parameters like spectral response, dark current,
dynamic range, temperature and linearity are measured
LTC data is used for radiometric corrections of the image data
However, to monitor the long term performance of the
detector and processing electronics, an in-flight
calibration scheme is implemented using LEDs
Eight LEDs are positioned in front of the CCD (without obstructing the
light path during imaging)
These LEDs are driven with a constant current and the integration
time is varied to get 16 exposure levels, covering the dynamic range
in a sequential manner (This sequence repeats in a cyclic form)
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IRS-P6 Sensor Specifications
IRS-P6 Sensor Specifications
Relative Spectral Response (RSR) Profiles
Relative Spectral Response (RSR) Profiles
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Data Products
Data Products
Space Imaging (now GeoEye) was granted a license to receive & distribute
AWiFS imagery from their ground station in Oklahoma (J an. 2005)
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Corrections applied to IRS-P6 raw data
Corrections applied to IRS-P6 raw data
Raw data suffers from both geometric and radiometric
distortions which have to be corrected
The steps for performing the radiometric correction:
Detector normalization
Failed degraded detector correction
Stagger correction for LISS-IV & SWIR bands of LISS-III & AWiFS
Line loss correction
Framing of required scene
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Conversion to Radiance
Conversion to Radiance
L* = (Lmax-Lmin) Qcal + Lmin
Qcalmax
Where
L* = spectral radiance at the sensors aperture W/(m
2
.sr.um)
Qcal = Calibrated Digital Number
Qcalmax = maximum possible DN value
255 for LISS-IV & LISS-III products,
1023 for 10-bit AWiFS and 255 for 8-bit AWiFS products
Lmax & Lmin = scaled spectral radiance (provided in the header file)
For GeoTIFF products, these values are found in the Image Description field
of the GeoTIFF header
For Fast Format products, values are in the HEADER.DAT
For LGSOWG products, values are in the leader file
Note that the values given for GAIN and BIAS in the header are not the GAIN and
BIAS as expected. These values are L_min and L_max given in units of
[mw/cm2/str/um] where BIAS is L_min and GAIN is L_max.
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Header File Information (Lmax & Lmin)
Header File Information (Lmax & Lmin)
LISS-IV Mono Band 3:
On board gain number for band 3 ......................... 3
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 3 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 9.92230
LISS-III:
On board gain number for band 2 ......................... 3
On board gain number for band 3 ......................... 3
On board gain number for band 4 ......................... 3
On board gain number for band 5 ......................... 2
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 2 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 12.06400
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 3 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 15.13100
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 4 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 15.75700
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 5 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 3.39700
AWiFS-A camera (A&C quadrant scenes):
On board gain number for band 2 ......................... 8
On board gain number for band 3 ......................... 9
On board gain number for band 4 ......................... 8
On board gain number for band 5 ......................... 9
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 2 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 52.34000
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 3 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 40.75000
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 4 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 28.42500
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 5 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 4.64500
AWiFS-B camera (B&D quadrant scenes):
On board gain number for band 2 ......................... 8
On board gain number for band 3 ......................... 9
On board gain number for band 4 ......................... 8
On board gain number for band 5 ......................... 9
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 2 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 52.34000
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 3 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 40.75000
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 4 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 28.42500
Minimum / maximum radiance for band 5 [mw/cm2/str/um] ... 0.00000 4.64500
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Ortho Generation: 10-to-8 bit rescaling
Ortho Generation: 10-to-8 bit rescaling
Ortho metadata provides DN-to-radiance scaling coefficients
DN
10
= 10-bit pixel value
L
min
= Min radiance value provided in scene metadata
L
max
= Max radiance value provided in scene metadata
10- to 8-bit rescaling maintains integrity of DN-to-radiance
coefficients
( )
min min max
10
1023
L L L
DN
L
rad
+ =
1023
255
10 8
= DN DN
( )
min min max
8
255
L L L
DN
L
rad
+ =
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Radiance to TOA Reflectance
Radiance to TOA Reflectance
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Resourcesat-1 IGSs
Resourcesat-1 IGSs
There is a new IRS-P6 ground station coming up in UAE
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IRS-IC and ID IGS
IRS-IC and ID IGS
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References
References
World Wide Web (WWW)
http://www.isro.org/
http://www.nrsa.gov.in/index.html/
http://www.spaceimaging.com/products/
Documents
IRS-P6 Data Users Handbook
IRS-1D Data Users Handbook
IRS Program: An Overview

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