• Title/Summary/Keyword: GCOM

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Global environment change monitoring using the next generation satellite sensor, SGLI/GCOM-C

  • HONDA Yoshiaki
    • Proceedings of the KSRS Conference
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    • 2005.10a
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    • pp.11-13
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    • 2005
  • The Third Assessment Report of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) concluded that many collective observations gave a aspect of a global warming and other changes in the climate system. Future earth observation using satellite data should monitor global climate change, and should contribute to social benefits. Especially, human activities has given the big impacts to earth environment This is a very complex affair, and nature itself also impacts the clouds, namely the seasonal variations. JAXA (former NASDA) has the plan of the Global Change Observation Mission (GCOM) for monitoring of global environmental change. SGLI (Second Generation GLI) onboard GCOM-C (Climate) satellite, which is one of this mission, is an optical sensor from Near-UV to TIR. This sensor is the GLI follow-on sensor, which has the various new characteristics. Polarized/multi-directional channels and 250m resolution channels are the unique characteristics on this sensor. This sensor can be contributed to clarification of coastal change in sea surface. This paper shows the introduction of the unique aspects and characteristics of the next generation satellite sensor, SGLIIGCOM-C, and shows the preliminary research for this sensor.

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JAXA'S EARTH OBSERVING PROGRAM

  • Shimoda, Haruhisa
    • Proceedings of the KSRS Conference
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    • v.1
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    • pp.7-10
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    • 2006
  • Four programs, i.e. TRMM, ADEOS2, ASTER, and ALOS are going on in Japanese Earth Observation programs. TRMM and ASTER are operating well, and TRMM operation will be continued to 2009. ADEOS2 was failed, but AMSR-E on Aqua is operating. ALOS (Advanced Land Observing Satellite) was successfully launched on $24^{th}$ Jan. 2006. ALOS carries three instruments, i.e., PRISM (Panchromatic Remote Sensing Instrument for Stereo Mapping), AVNIR-2 (Advanced Visible and Near Infrared Radiometer), and PALSAR (Phased Array L band Synthetic Aperture Radar). PRISM is a 3 line panchromatic push broom scanner with 2.5m IFOV. AVNIR-2 is a 4 channel multi spectral scanner with 10m IFOV. PALSAR is a full polarimetric active phased array SAR. PALSAR has many observation modes including full polarimetric mode and scan SAR mode. After the unfortunate accident of ADEOS2, JAXA still have plans of Earth observation programs. Next generation satellites will be launched in 2008-2012 timeframe. They are GOSAT (Greenhouse Gas Observation Satellite), GCOM-W and GCOM-C (ADEOS-2 follow on), and GPM (Global Precipitation Mission) core satellite. GOSAT will carry 2 instruments, i.e. a green house gas sensor and a cloud/aerosol imager. The main sensor is a Fourier transform spectrometer (FTS) and covers 0.76 to 15 ${\mu}m$ region with 0.2 to 0.5 $cm^{-1}$ resolution. GPM is a joint project with NASA and will carry two instruments. JAXA will develop DPR (Dual frequency Precipitation Radar) which is a follow on of PR on TRMM. Another project is EarthCare. It is a joint project with ESA and JAXA is going to provide CPR (Cloud Profiling Radar). Discussions on future Earth Observation programs have been started including discussions on ALOS F/O.

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Development Trend of Japanese Optical Payloads (일본의 광학탑재체(지상/해양 관측용) 개발 경향)

  • Myung, Hwan-Chun
    • Current Industrial and Technological Trends in Aerospace
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.65-75
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    • 2010
  • In 2014, Japan is scheduled to launch GCOM(Global Change Observation Mission)-C for the global change observation mission, where SGLI(Second-generation Global Imager) is planned for optical multi-channel observation ofa radiation budget and a carbon cycle. Depending on the spectral channels, SGLI consists ofS GLI-VNR(Visible Near IR) and SGLI-IRS(IR Scanning). Their main design schemes are mostly based upon those ofthe previous instruments ever developed in Japan, which is intended to reduce the development risk for the advanced performance. Accordingly, for the better understanding ofSG LI, the paper reviews the history oft he Japanese optical payloads from two different views: VNR and IR. Through the review, a comparison among the Japanese optical instruments is made to distinguish the development trend toward SGLI ofGC OM-C.

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A study on possibility of land vegetation observation with Mid-resolution sensor

  • Honda, Y.;Moriyama, M.;Ono, A.;Kajiwara, K.
    • Proceedings of the KSRS Conference
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    • 2007.10a
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    • pp.349-352
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    • 2007
  • The Fourth Assessment Report of IPCC predicted that global warming is already happening and it should be caused from the increase of greenhouse gases by the extension of human activities. These global changes will give a serious influence for human society. Global environment can be monitored by the earth observation using satellite. For the observation of global climate change and resolving the global warming process, satellite should be useful equipment and its detecting data contribute to social benefits effectively. JAXA (former NASDA) has made a new plan of the Global Change Observation Mission (GCOM) for monitoring of global environmental change. SGLI (Second Generation GLI) onboard GCOM-C (Climate) satellite, which is one of this mission, provides an optical sensor from Near-DV to TIR. Characteristic specifications of SGLI are as follows; 1) 250 m resolutions over land and area along the shore, 2) Three directional polarization observation (red and NIR), and 3) 500 m resolutions temperature over land and area along shore. These characteristics are useful in many fields of social benefits. For example, multi-angular observation and 250 m high frequency observation give new knowledge in monitoring of land vegetation. It is expected that land products with land aerosol information by polarization observation are improved remarkably. We are studying these possibilities by ground data and satellite data.

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Current status and future plan for using satellite data in water resource management of K-water (K-water의 수자원 분야 위성정보 활용현황 및 계획)

  • Choi, Sunghwa;Shin, Daeyun;Kim, Hyeonsik;Hwang, Euiho
    • Proceedings of the Korea Water Resources Association Conference
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    • 2016.05a
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    • pp.605-605
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    • 2016
  • 최근 기후변화로 인한 국지적 또는 대규모 극한 가뭄과 홍수가 빈발함에 따라 수자원 관리 여건은 점점 더 어려워지고 있다. 이런 물 관련 재해에 보다 효과적으로 대응하기 위해서는 수자원인자에 대한 시공간적 모니터링이 필수적인데, 이러한 관점에서 시공간적 광역관측이 가능한 위성자료의 활용가치는 매우 높게 평가되고 있으며, 최근에는 국내외적으로 위성자료를 이용하여 수문 인자 산출, 가뭄 홍수 등의 모니터링 기술 등에 대한 연구가 활발히 진행되고 있다. K-water는 위성정보 활용기술력 축적을 통한 보다 효율적인 수자원 관리를 하기 위하여 수자원 분야에 활용 가능한 해외의 주요 위성자료를 실시간 직수신 처리하여 표출하는 K-water 위성영상관리시스템(K-SIMS, K-water Satellite Image Management System)을 2015년에 구축하였다. 현재 K-SIMS를 통해 관리되는 위성은 AQUA, TERRA, NPP, GCOM-W, GPM로서 총 5개이다. AQUA, TERRA, NPP 위성은 각 궤도운영 스케쥴에 따라 한반도 상공을 통과하는 시각에 안테나가 위성의 궤도를 따라가며 수신하고, GCOM-W, GPM 위성자료는 FTP 접속를 통해 준실시간으로 수신하고 있다. 산출물은 AQUA, TERRA, NPP가 각각 23종, GCOM-W 9종, GPM 2종 등 총 80여종으로 위성원시자료 수신즉시 처리 표출까지 실시간 자동 수행되고 있으나 식생지수, 강수, 구름, 대기온도, 수증기 등 대부분 수문기상학적 변수들로 구성되어 있어 수자원 관리 현업 업무에는 직접 사용하기에는 다소 한계가 있다. 따라서, 위성자료의 활용성을 높이기 위하여 수문해석에 중요한 변수인 토양수분에 대해서 AQUA, TERRA의 MODIS LST(Land Surface Temperature)와 식생지수(Vegetation Index)를 이용하여 SMI(Soil Moisture Index)를 산출하고 이를 K-SIMS에 표출하는 체계를 추가로 구축하여 현업 활용도가 높은 자료를 생산하고 있으며, 향후 위성자료를 활용한 가뭄지수를 추가로 산출하여 표출할 계획이다. 이와 함께 K-water는 차세대 중형위성 개발 사업에 따른 수자원 위성 확보에 대비해 수자원 분야 위성활용 중장기 계획을 마련하였다. 향후에 광학위성, SAR위성 등 다양한 위성자료의 융복합적 활용을 통하여 위성산출물 알고리즘을 지속적으로 개발함으로써 홍수, 가뭄, 수질 등 물 재해 대응 및 수자원 관리 전 분야에 위성자료의 활용을 확대해 나갈 계획이다.

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Revising Passive Satellite-based Soil Moisture Retrievals over East Asia Using SMOS (MIRAS) and GCOM-W1 (AMSR2) Satellite and GLDAS Dataset (자료동화 토양수분 데이터를 활용한 동아시아지역 수동형 위성 토양수분 데이터 보정: SMOS (MIRAS), GCOM-W1 (AMSR2) 위성 및 GLDAS 데이터 활용)

  • Kim, Hyunglok;Kim, Seongkyun;Jeong, Jeahwan;Shin, Incheol;Shin, Jinho;Choi, Minha
    • Journal of Wetlands Research
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    • v.18 no.2
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    • pp.132-147
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    • 2016
  • In this study the Microwave Imaging Radiometer using Aperture Synthesis (MIRAS) sensor onboard the Soil Moisture Ocean Salinity (SMOS) and Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) sensor onboard the Global Change Observation Mission-Water (GCOM-W1) based soil moisture retrievals were revised to obtain better accuracy of soil moisture and higher data acquisition rate over East Asia. These satellite-based soil moisture products are revised against a reference land model data set, called Global Land Data Assimilation System (GLDAS), using Cumulative Distribution Function (CDF) matching and regression approach. Since MIRAS sensor is perturbed by radio frequency interferences (RFI), the worst part of soil moisture retrieval, East Asia, constantly have been undergoing loss of data acquisition rate. To overcome this limitation, the threshold of RFI, DQX, and composite days were suggested to increase data acquisition rate while maintaining appropriate data quality through comparison of land surface model data set. The revised MIRAS and AMSR2 products were compared with in-situ soil moisture and land model data set. The results showed that the revising process increased correlation coefficient values of SMOS and AMSR2 averagely 27% 11% and decreased the root mean square deviation (RMSD) decreased 61% and 57% as compared to in-situ data set. In addition, when the revised products' correlation coefficient values are calculated with model data set, about 80% and 90% of pixels' correlation coefficients of SMOS and AMSR2 increased and all pixels' RMSD decreased. Through our CDF-based revising processes, we propose the way of mutual supplementation of MIRAS and AMSR2 soil moisture retrievals.

Validation of GCOM-W1/AMSR2 Sea Surface Temperature and Error Characteristics in the Northwest Pacific (북서태평양 GCOM-W1/AMSR2 해수면온도 검증 및 오차 특성)

  • Kim, Hee-Young;Park, Kyung-Ae;Woo, Hye-Jin
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.32 no.6
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    • pp.721-732
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    • 2016
  • The accuracy and error characteristics of microwave Sea Surface Temperature (SST) measurements in the Northwest Pacific were analyzed by utilizing 162,264 collocated matchup data between GCOM-W1/AMSR2 data and oceanic in-situ temperature measurements from July 2012 to August 2016. The AMSR2 SST measurements had a Root-Mean-Square (RMS) error of about $0.63^{\circ}C$ and a bias error of about $0.05^{\circ}C$. The SST differences between AMSR2 and in-situ measurements were caused by various factors, such as wind speed, SST, distance from the coast, and the thermal front. The AMSR2 SST data showed an error due to the diurnal effect, which was much higher than the in-situ temperature measurements at low wind speed (<6 m/s) during the daytime. In addition, the RMS error tended to be large in the winter because the emissivity of the sea surface was increased by high wind speeds and it could induce positive deviation in the SST retrieval. Low sensitivity at colder temperature and land contamination also affected an increase in the error of AMSR2 SST. An analysis of the effect of the thermal front on satellite SST error indicated that SST error increased as the magnitude of the spatial gradient of the SST increased and the distance from the front decreased. The purpose of this study was to provide a basis for further research applying microwave SST in the Northwest Pacific. In addition, the results suggested that analyzing the errors related to the environmental factors in the study area must precede any further analysis in order to obtain more accurate satellite SST measurements.

Evaluation of satellite-based soil moisture retrieval over the korean peninsula : using AMSR2 LPRM algorithm and ground measurement data (위성기반 토양수분 자료의 한반도 지역 적용성 평가: AMSR2 LPRM 알고리즘과 지점관측 자료를 이용하여)

  • Kim, Seongkyun;Kim, Hyunglok;Choi, Minha
    • Journal of Korea Water Resources Association
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    • v.49 no.5
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    • pp.423-429
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    • 2016
  • This study aims at assessing the quality of the Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer 2 (AMSR2) soil moisture products onboard GCOM-W1 satellite based on Land Parameter Retrieval Model (LPRM) soil moisture retrieval algorithm with field measurements in South Korea from March to September, 2014. Results of mean bias and root mean square error between AMSR2 LPRM soil moisture products (X-band) and ground measurements showed reasonable value of 0.03 and 0.16. Also, the maximum of the Pearson correlation coefficients was 0.67, which showed good agreement in terms of temporal variability with ground measurements. By comparing AMSR2 soil moisture with in-situ measurement according to the overpass time and band frequency, X-band products on the ascending time outperformed than those of C1-band and C2-band. Furthermore, this study offers an insight into the applicability of the AMSR2 soil moisture products for monitoring various natural disasters at a large scale such as drought and flood.

An Estimation of the Composite Sea Surface Temperature using COMS and Polar Orbit Satellites Data in Northwest Pacific Ocean (천리안 위성과 극궤도 위성 자료를 이용한 북서태평양 해역의 합성 해수면온도 산출)

  • Kim, Tae-Myung;Chung, Sung-Rae;Chung, Chu-Yong;Baek, Seonkyun
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.33 no.3
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    • pp.275-285
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    • 2017
  • National Meteorological Satellite Center(NMSC) has produced Sea Surface Temperature (SST) using Communication, Ocean, and Meteorological Satellite(COMS) data since April 2011. In this study, we have developed a new regional COMS SST algorithm optimized within the North-West Pacific Ocean area based on the Multi-Channel SST(MCSST) method and made a composite SST using polar orbit satellites as well as the COMS data. In order to retrieve the optimized SST at Northwest Pacific, we carried out a colocation process of COMS and in-situ buoy data to make coefficients of the MCSST algorithm through the new cloud masking including contaminant pixels and quality control processes of buoy data. And then, we have estimated the composite SST through the optimal interpolation method developed by National Institute of Meteorological Science(NIMS). We used four satellites SST data including COMS, NOAA-18/19(National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration-18/19), and GCOM-W1(Global Change Observation Mission-Water 1). As a result, the root mean square error ofthe composite SST for the period of July 2012 to June 2013 was $0.95^{\circ}C$ in comparison with in-situ buoy data.

Comparison of Sea Surface Temperature from Oceanic Buoys and Satellite Microwave Measurements in the Western Coastal Region of Korean Peninsula (한반도 서해 연안 해역에서의 해양 부이 관측 수온과 위성 마이크로파 관측 해수면온도의 비교)

  • Kim, Hee-Young;Park, Kyung-Ae
    • Journal of the Korean earth science society
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    • v.39 no.6
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    • pp.555-567
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    • 2018
  • In order to identify the characteristics of sea surface temperature (SST) differences between microwave SST from GCOM-W1/AMSR2 and in-situ measurements in the western coast of Korea, a total of 6,457 collocated matchup data were produced using the in-situ temperature measurements from marine buoy stations (Deokjeokdo, Chilbaldo, and Oeyeondo) from July 2012 to December 2017. The accuracy of satellite microwave SSTs was presented by comparing the ocean buoy data of Deokjeokdo, Chilbaldo, and Oeyeondo stations with the AMSR2 SST data more than five years. The SST differences between the microwave SST and the in-situ temperature measurements showed some dependence on environmental factors, such as wind speed and water temperature. The AMSR2 SSTs were tended to be higher than the in-situ temperature measurements during the daytime when the wind speed was low ($<6ms^{-1}$). On the other hand, they showed positive deviation increasingly as the wind speed increased for nighttime. In addition, increasing tendency of SST differences was related to decreasing sensitivity of microwave sensors at low temperatures and data contamination by land. A monthly analysis of the SST difference showed that unlike the previous trend, which was known to be the largest in winter when strong winds were blowing, the SST difference was largest in summer in Deokjeokdo and Chilbaldo buoy stations. This seemed to be induced by differential tidal mixing at the collocated matchup points. This study presented problems and limitations of the use of microwave SSTs with high contribution to the SST composites in the western coastal region off the Korean peninsula.