E. Natasha Stavros

and 23 more

Observations of Planet Earth from space are a critical resource for science and society. Satellite measurements represent very large investments and United States (US) agencies organize their effort to maximize the return on that investment. The US National Research Council conducts a survey of earth science and applications to prioritize observations for the coming decade. The most recent survey prioritized a visible to shortwave infrared imaging spectrometer and a multi-spectral thermal infrared imager to meet a range of needs. First, and perhaps, foremost, it will be the premier integrated observatory for observing the emerging impacts of climate change . It will characterize the diversity of plant life by resolving chemical and physiological signatures. It will address wildfire, observing pre-fire risk, fire behavior and post-fire recovery. It will inform responses to hazards and disasters guiding responses to a wide range of events, including oil spills, toxic minerals in minelands, harmful algal blooms, landslides and other geological hazards. The SBG team analyzed needed instrument characteristics (spatial, temporal and spectral resolution, measurement uncertainty) and assessed the cost, mass, power, volume, and risk of different architectures. The Research and Applications team examined available algorithms, calibration and validation and societal applications and used end-to-end modeling to assess uncertainty. The team also identified valuable opportunities for international collaboration to increase the frequency of revisit through data sharing, adding value for all partners. Analysis of the science, applications, architecture and partnerships led to a clear measurement strategy and a well-defined observing system architecture.

E. Natasha Stavros

and 15 more

Imaging spectroscopy data is becoming more readily available from different satellite and airborne platforms. As this data becomes more prolific, there is a need for shared data tools and code for wrangling, cleaning, and analyzing it. The geospatial Imaging Spectroscopy Processing Environment on the Cloud (ImgSPEC) pioneers an on-demand science data processing platform with scalable back-end compute. It considers user experience and facilitates open science. ImgSPEC enables users to create data products in areas of interest using default workflows from registered algorithms, while also enabling users to customize scripts and workflows. ImgSPEC seamlessly interfaces with NASA Earthdata Search and tracks appropriate metadata for reproducibility when generating data products to share with others. Users can work in their preferred workspace (e.g., Rstudio, Jupyterlab, or command line) thereby facilitating use of open science software packages and collaborative coding through Git. ImgSPEC leverages existing NASA-funded information technologies such as the hybrid on-premise/cloud science data system (HySDS) and the Multi-mission Algorithm and Analysis Platform (MAAP). It also creates seamless interfaces with NASA-funded ECOSIS – a crowd-sourced spectral database, and ECOSML – a crowd-sourced model database. We demonstrate ImgSPEC on the Terrestrial Ecosystem use case processing through to foliar traits and fractional cover, thus aligning with driving thrusts for the NASA Surface Biology and Geology (SBG) Science and Applications Communities. As this technology is more widely adopted the interface with Amazon Web Services and NASA Earthdata search will enable broader use of more data (publicly available or loaded by the user) across more domains.

Benjamin Poulter

and 20 more

Imaging spectroscopy is a remote-sensing technique that retrieves reflectances across visible to shortwave infrared wavelengths at high spectral resolution (<10 nm). Spectroscopic reflectance data provide novel information on the properties of the Earth’s terrestrial and aquatic surfaces. Until recently, imaging spectroscopy missions were limited spatially and temporally using airborne instruments, such as the Next Generation Airborne Visible InfraRed Imaging Spectrometer (AVIRIS-NG), providing the main source of observations. Here, we present a land-surface modeling framework to help support end-to-end traceability of emerging imaging spectroscopy spaceborne missions. The LPJ-wsl dynamic global vegetation model is coupled with the canopy radiative transfer model, PROSAIL, to generate global, gridded, daily visible to shortwave infrared (VSWIR) spectra. LPJ-wsl variables are cross-walked to meet required PROSAIL parameters, which include leaf structure, Chlorophyll a+b, brown pigment, equivalent water thickness, and dry matter content. Simulated spectra are compared to a boreal forest site, a temperate forest, managed grassland, and a tropical forest site using reflectance data from canopy imagers mounted on towers and from air and spaceborne platforms. We find that canopy nitrogen and leaf-area index are the most uncertain variables in translating LPJ-wsl to PROSAIL parameters but at first order, LPJ-PROSAIL successfully simulates surface reflectance dynamics. Future work will optimize functional relationships required for improving PROSAIL parameters and include the development of the LPJ-model to represent improvements in leaf water content and canopy nitrogen. The LPJ-PROSAIL model can support missions such as NASA’s Surface Biology and Geology (SBG) and higher-level modeled products.