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Topic Name: NASA and NOAA Regarding Concerns Over NPOESS Preparatory Project VIIRS Sensor
Category: STAR (Space, Telecommunications & Radioscience)
Research persons: David A. Siegel, James Yoder
Location: UC Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara CA 93106, United States
Details
We are ocean biologists and biogeochemists who use
NASA satellite data to study
the ocean's biosphere, its changes in time and how it is affected by and
responds to humankind's activities. Our science requires satellite "ocean color"
sensors that can quantify trends in global ocean biological and
biogeochemical
properties on intraseasonal to decadal time scales. Ocean color data are
critical to address strategic needs of other federal agencies, including the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
(NOAA), the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA), and the U.S. Navy. High
quality ocean color observations have applications such as detecting and
monitoring changes in water quality,
tracking harmful algal blooms,
assessing underwater visibility for divers, and a variety of other applications
related to ocean ecosystems, carbon and elemental cycling, coastal habitats, and
coastal hazards. For the past decade, we have been privileged to use the
internationally recognized highest quality NASA data sets from SeaWiFS and MODIS
on Aqua. These NASA data sets have literally revolutionized our field and
greatly enhanced our abilities to inform policymakers and the public of the
changes to our oceans.
We have become increasingly concerned that VIIRS (Visible
Infrared Imager/Radiometer Suite), the ocean color sensor on the NPOESS
Preparatory Project (NPP) mission, will be incapable of providing imagery for
climate science
applications. VIIRS on NPP was supposed to be the next ocean color mission
to follow SeaWiFS and MODIS on Aqua and extend key biological and biogeochemical
oceanographic observations. Importantly, this requirement of continuing the
EOS-level climate science observations across all
Earth Science disciplines
was built into the recommendations of the NRC's Decadal Survey committee.
Recent summaries of VIIRS performance from the IPO and NASA,
presented at the NPP Science Team
Meeting in August 2007, clearly show that the present configuration of the VIIRS
sensor will not come close to meeting the VIIRS design specifications and
required spectral radiometric accuracies - which are minimum standards for ocean
color sensor performance for climate science applications. The so-called
"cherry-picked" configuration of the VIIRS's filter array will just meet these
standards but only if the rest of pre-flight testing is completely error free
(which is unrealistic as VIIRS just entered its testing phase). Hence, we have
little confidence that VIIRS on NPP will ever provide well- calibrated ocean
color imagery. It may be able to provide qualitative imagery for descriptive
purposes (detecting turbid water plumes, etc.); but not high quality ocean color
imagery required for quantifying the variability and impacts of natural and
human-induced changes of our oceans.
We face the ominous likelihood that in the near future there
will be a disruption in climate quality ocean color data as both MODIS Aqua and
SeaWiFS are beyond their designed mission lifetimes. Unfortunately, there is
nothing in the first round of
Earth Science
Decadal Survey plans for EOS level climate sensors beyond VIIRS on NPP (and
then VIIRS on NPOESS). The Decadal Survey recommends a 2013-2016 launch date for
the Aerosol/Cloud/Ecosystems (ACE) mission - a mission that if structured
properly could significantly contribute to our community. Our understanding,
however, is that even a 2016 launch for ACE is optimistic and would require
funding for mission planning to begin no later than 2009. As it looks now, both
MODIS-Aqua and SeaWiFS sensors are likely to be dead long before the ACE
mission's launch.
In contrast to other international partnerships, such as with
altimetry, we are not getting much help with global ocean color measurements
from our international partners. Unfortunately, present ocean color missions are
limited at best. For example, the European Space Agency's (ESA) MERIS mission
has a narrow swath (only a third of SeaWiFS's) and has several image quality
issues (radiometric inconsistencies, scan line dependence in derived products,
no vicarious calibration procedure in place, etc.). We are not able to routinely
receive global MERIS Level 1 data nor do we have detailed pre-flight
characterization data, so there is no existing way for us to work with ESA to
fix these problems. Nearly all other
international ocean color
missions in space today lack global coverage and are experimental imagers
with narrow swaths and poorly characterized imaging capabilities. Again, data
access remains difficult and we have little ability to understand their
capabilities. Future international missions are likewise problematic, as launch
dates are far into the future, and we anticipate the same problems we have today
with current international sensors (limited access to data, poor sensor
characterization, etc.).
We see three choices that the Space and Earth science agencies
can make; each has serious and long-term consequences for our scientific
discipline, the management of ocean resources, and society's ability to
understand climate change and mitigate human impacts on ocean habitats and
ecosystems. These are:
- Aggressively pursue and document improvements to the VIIRS sensor on NPP
that enable it to meet the specifications required for climate capable ocean
color observatories,
- Implement a stand-alone, global ocean color mission, or
- Continue with plans of flying NPP, but in full recognition of its
consequences.
1. An aggressive rehabilitation of VIIRS on NPP is theoretically
possible, and scientists and engineers at NASA GSFC have long been considering
it. As you likely know, there are many issues (institutional, contractual,
fiscal, schedule, interagency agendas, etc.) that will make the successful
rehabilitation of VIIRS extremely difficult. This strategy will require a much
improved and transparent pre-launch testing and on-orbit calibration/validation
program (including on-orbit maneuvers for lunar calibrations) than is in place
today for the NPP program. Even if this plan were to be pursued, there is no
certainty that it will work in the end. For example, the MODIS sensor on the
Terra platform has yet to provide stable ocean color data products despite many
person years of effort. MODIS on Terra has shown substantial radiometric signal
degradation on orbit (up to 40%). This degradation varies with scan angle and
mirror-side and may have resulted from damage done to the mirror coatings in
pre-launch testing after its pre-launch characterization. Limitations with the
on-orbit calibration system (e.g., solar diffuser door anomaly, inability to
track polarization changes) have resulted in temporal variations in calibrated
radiances that obfuscate ocean color trends. Seven years after its launch,
researchers at the Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) are still working to
produce high quality, ocean color data products from MODIS on Terra.
2. A gap-filling mission in the spirit of SeaWiFS can be
implemented and flown. SeaWiFS is a success story of the "better, faster,
cheaper" version of NASA. A dedicated, single-instrument ocean mission can be
flown easily and cost- effectively. NASA has launched "quick recovery" missions
before. The Quick Scatterometer (QuikSCAT) mission was launched to fill the
critical data gap created after the NASA Scatterometer (NSCAT) failed. The ocean
color science community has learned much over the last decade about what is
required for a successful mission. NASA HQ has a requested detailed concept
study for this type of mission and this work is being conducted at the Goddard
Space Flight Center. This gap-filling sensor could also be placed on a mission
of opportunity. This is clearly the lowest risk option for insuring that
high-quality ocean color data are available for the next decade of science and
applications. 3. The last choice is the situation we find ourselves in today,
and arguably the worst-case scenario. Staying the course with NPP will clearly
not result in climate quality ocean color data. This decision must be made with
the understanding that these data will not be available at the time when efforts
to address climate change, coastal hypoxia, harmful algal blooms, fisheries
health, ocean acidification and many other issues are accelerating. The bottom
line is that essential research quality ocean color data will not be available
in the very near future unless immediate and substantive actions are taken. The
lack of global ocean color observations at the accuracy and quality at which
NASA is currently capable will impact critical climate research conducted in the
U.S. Ocean Carbon and Biogeochemistry (OCB) program as well as
ocean observatory efforts currently coming on-line from the National Science
Foundation (OOI) and NOAA (IOOS). In particular, there will be no way to
integrate the invaluable in situ regional observations of the ocean observatory
nodes with global observations of ocean plants, animals, and overall health and
chemistry for better understanding and prediction of Earth System responses to
climate variability and change. Without global and high-resolution coastal ocean
color data, there will unquestionably be an impact to implementation and
delivery of results to support goals of the Climate Change Science Program (e.g.
carbon cycle and ecosystem science), the U.S. Ocean Action Plan and recently
released Ocean Research Priorities Plan themes, and the Global Earth Observation
System of Systems objectives.
We thank you for your attention and consideration of this
matter. Please let us know what we can do to help.
About Researchers:
David A. Siegel, Professor of Marine Science and Director of the
Institute for Computational Earth System Science, University of California,
Santa Barbara and Member of the NASA NPP Science team
James Yoder, Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution; former Chair of the Carbon Cycle Scientific Steering Group, Current
Chair of the International Ocean Color Coordinating Group and former member of
ESSAAC
Supporting Signatures:
Mark Abbott, Dean and Professor, College of Oceanic and
Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State University
Robert Anderson, Doherty Senior Scholar, Lamont-Doherty Earth
Observatory, Columbia University and Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
Kevin R. Arrigo, Associate Professor and Director, Graduate
Program in Earth, Energy, and Environmental Sciences, Stanford University
William M. Balch, Senior Research Scientist, Bigelow Laboratory
for Ocean Sciences and Member of the NASA NPP Science team
Richard T. Barber, H.W. Smith Professor Emeritus of Biological
Oceanography, Duke University and Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
Michael J. Behrenfeld, Senior Research Professor, Department of
Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University and Member of the NASA NPP
Science team
Michael Bender, Professor of Geosciences, Princeton University,
Fellow of the American Geophysical Union and Member of the National Academy of
Sciences
Emmanuel Boss, Associate Professor, School of Marine Science,
University of Maine
Ken O. Buesseler, Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
Douglas G. Capone, Wrigley Professor of Environmental Biology,
Wrigley Institute for Environmental Studies & Department of Biological Sciences,
University of Southern California
Francisco Chavez, Senior Scientist, Monterey Bay Aquarium
Research Institute and Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of
the Sciences
Carlos E. Del Castillo, Senior Scientist, Applied Physics
Laboratory, The Johns Hopkins University
Heidi Dierssen, Assistant Professor, Department of Marine
Sciences, University of Connecticut
Tommy D. Dickey, Professor of Marine Science, University of
California, Santa Barbara and Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
Scott Doney, Senior Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution, Chair of the U.S. Ocean Carbon and Biogeochemistry Program and
Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
Paul Falkowski, Board of Governors' Professor, Institute of
Marine and Coastal Sciences and Department of Geological Sciences, Rutgers
University, Fellow of the American Geophysical Union and Member of the National
Academy of Sciences
Richard Feely, Supervisory Oceanographer, Pacific Marine
Environmental Laboratory and Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
Mick Follows, Principal Research Scientist, Dept. of Earth,
Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Steven D. Gaines, Professor of Marine Ecology and Director of
the Marine Sciences Institute, University of California, Santa Barbara
Joaquim I. Goes, Senior Research Scientist, Bigelow Laboratory
for Ocean Sciences
Howard R. Gordon, Distinguished Professor, Department of
Physics, University of Miami and 2004 Jerlov Award Recipient
David Glover, Research Specialist, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
Gordon Hamilton, Associate Professor, Climate Change Institute,
University of Maine, Orono
Kenneth S. Johnson, Senior Scientist, Monterey Bay Aquarium
Research Institute
Ralph Keeling, Professor, Scripps Institution Oceanography,
University of California, San Diego
Joan Kleypas, Scientist II, National Center for Atmospheric
Research
Raphael Kudela, Associate Professor or Marine Sciences and
Director of the IGPP Center for Remote Sensing, University of California, Santa
Cruz
Ricardo Letelier, Professor, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric
Sciences, Oregon State University
Marlon Lewis, Professor of Oceanography, Dalhousie University
Steven E. Lohrenz, Professor and Chair of the Marine Science
Department, University of Southern Mississippi
Natalie Mahowald, Assistant Professor, Department of Earth and
Atmospheric Sciences, Cornell University
Stephane Maritorena, Associate Researcher, Institute for
Computational Earth System Science, University of California, Santa Barbara and
Member of the NASA NPP Science team
John Marra, Professor and Director, Aquatic Research And
Environmental Assessment Center, CUNY, Brooklyn College
Patricia Matrai, Senior Research Scientist, Bigelow Laboratory
for Ocean Sciences
Dennis J. McGillicuddy, Jr., Senior Scientist, Woods Hole
Oceanographic Institution
Wade R. McGillis, Doherty Scientist and Professor,
Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory and Earth and Environmental Engineering,
Columbia University
Galen A. McKinley, Assistant Professor of Atmospheric and
Oceanic Sciences, University of Wisconsin - Madison
William L. Miller, Director, University of Georgia Marine
Institute Sapelo Island and Professor, Department of Marine Science, University
of Georgia
B. Greg Mitchell, Research Professor, Scripps Institution
Oceanography, University of California, San Diego
J. Ru Morrison, Assistant Research Professor, Ocean Process
Analysis Lab, University of New Hampshire
Frank Muller-Karger, Professor and Dean, School for Marine
Science and Technology, University of Massachusetts, Dartmouth
Raymond G. Najjar, Associate Professor, Departments of
Meteorology and Geosciences, The Pennsylvania State University
Norman B. Nelson, Associate Researcher, Institute for
Computational Earth System Science, University of California, Santa Barbara and
Member of the NASA NPP Science team
Mary Jane Perry, Professor of Marine Sciences, Ira C. Darling
Marine Center, University of Maine
Collin S. Roesler, Associate Research Professor, School of
Marine Science, University of Maine
John Ryan, Oceanographer, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research
Institute
Brandon S. Sackmann, Postdoctoral Fellow, Monterey Bay Aquarium
Research Institute
Jorge Sarmiento, Professor, Atmospheric and Oceanic Science,
Princeton University and Fellow of the American Geophysical Union
Oscar Schofield, Professor, Institute of Marine and Coastal
Sciences, Rutgers University
Raymond C. Smith, Professor Emeritus, Department of Geography,
University of California, Santa Barbara and 2002 Jerlov Award Recipient
Heidi Sosik, Associate Scientist, Woods Hole Oceanographic
Institution
Dariusz Stramski, Professor, Scripps Institution Oceanography,
University of California, San Diego
Ajit Subramaniam, Doherty Associate Research Scientist, Lamont
Doherty Earth Observatory, Columbia University
Andrew Thomas, Professor, School of Marine Sciences, University
of Maine
J. Ronald Zaneveld, Senior Oceanographer, WET Labs, Inc.,
Professor Emeritus, College of Oceanic and Atmospheric Sciences, Oregon State
University and 2006 Jerlov Award Recipient
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