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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Comparison of in Situ Land Surface Temperatures Measured with Radiometers and Pyrgeometers: Consequences for Calibration and Validation of Thermal Infrared Sensors

Enric ValorVicente CasellesMa Jesus BarberaRuben MoyaJuan M SanchezRaquel NiclòsCésar Coll

subject

Accuracy and precisionRadiometer010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences0211 other engineering and technologiesMagnitude (mathematics)Field of view02 engineering and technologyRadiationViewing angle01 natural sciencesTemperature measurementAtmosphereEnvironmental science021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensing

description

Land surface temperature (LST) is a key magnitude in many exchange processes between the surface and the atmosphere. LST measurement from satellites provides an efficient way to monitor its change across wide areas on Earth, an essential issue being LST validation using in situ measurements to assess its accuracy and precision. Presently, there are two widely used methodologies: temperature measurements made by wideband radiometers observing the land surface with a given viewing angle and a limited field of view, and measurements provided by total radiation pyrgeometers with a nearly hemispheric field of view. Although both measurements are correlated, they are not equivalent; thus, it is relevant to establish their differences when they are used as ground reference for the thermal infrared sensors. Both methodologies have been compared over a homogeneous grass and a heterogeneous vineyard under different atmospheric conditions. The results show good correspondence in the first case, with differences +0.3±1.0 K, while in the second one the discrepancies can be significant (-1.7±1.1 K) affecting the reliability on the results of the validation of satellite-borne sensors.

https://doi.org/10.1109/igarss.2018.8518136