This will count as one of your downloads.
You will have access to both the presentation and article (if available).
The Absolute Radiance Interferometer (ARI) was designed to measure absolute spectrally resolved infrared radiance (200 – 2700 cm-1 at 0.5 cm-1) with ultra-high accuracy (<0.1 K, k = 3 brightness temperature). A key feature of the ARI instrument is the On-orbit Verification and Test System (OVTS), which provides end-to-end calibration verification of the ARI measurements with direct on-orbit traceability to international standards (SI). The ARI instrument has demonstrated the required radiometric accuracy for CLARREO and has achieved NASA Technology Readiness Level 6.
The International Space Station (ISS) would provide an affordable opportunity to demonstrate this new capability. The ISS orbit gives good time of day coverage for latitudes below 52 degrees, and the natural precession of the ISS offers many orbit crossings for radiance intercomparisons with operational satellites in sun-synchronous orbits. Thus, the ARI could serve as an on-orbit reference calibration standard for the operational infrared sounders, and these sounders could in turn be used to create climate benchmark products at all latitudes. In this approach, an ARI mission on the ISS would leverage operational instruments to provide a demonstration of the new climate decadal trending capability offered by spectrally resolved radiances with high accuracy proven on-orbit.
View contact details
No SPIE Account? Create one