4.2 Article

The use of an improved atmospheric correction algorithm for removing atmospheric effects from remotely sensed images using an atmosphere-surface simulation and meteorological data

Journal

METEOROLOGICAL APPLICATIONS
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 381-387

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/met.80

Keywords

atmospheric correction; aerosol optical thickness; meteorological parameters; satellite remote sensing

Funding

  1. Thames Water Utilities
  2. NERC Equipment Pool for Field Spectroscopy (EPFS) [GER1500]

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Unless effective corrections can be applied, satellite remote sensing data will remain modified by the absorption and scattering effects of the atmosphere through which the electromagnetic radiation must pass, between the Sun, the ground and the sensor. The true reflectance of the]and will not be recoverable, and multi-temporal datasets will not be comparable as a result of the variability of the atmosphere. This article presents a method of removing atmospheric effects from satellite remote sensing images for low-reflectance areas. Such as water, where the atmosphere accounts for the majority of the at-satellite measured radiance in the visible bands. The method uses visibility observations to select a reference image for the area of interest. The reflectance of the dark target is calculated after atmospheric correction from the reference image, and is used in conjunction with Turner and Spencer's atmosphere-surface simulation (Turner and Spencer, 1972) and Forster's method (Forster, 1984), to correct the remainder of the images. The method is applied to three large water treatment reservoirs to the west of London. Copyright (c) 2008 Royal Meteorological Society.

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