Paper
22 December 2006 Performance verification of the Geosynchronous Imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (GIFTS) on-board blackbody calibration system
Fred A. Best, Henry E. Revercomb, David C. Tobin, Robert O. Knuteson, Joseph K. Taylor, Donald J. Thielman, Douglas P. Adler, Mark W. Werner, Scott D. Ellington, John D. Elwell, Deron K. Scott, Gregory W. Cantwell, Gail E. Bingham, William L. Smith
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The NASA New Millennium Program's Geosynchronous Imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (GIFTS) instrument was designed to provide enormous advances in water vapor, wind, temperature, and trace gas profiling from geostationary orbit. The top-level instrument calibration requirement is to measure brightness temperature to better than 1 K (3 sigma) over a broad range of atmospheric brightness temperatures, with a reproducibility of ±0.2 K. For the onboard calibration approach used by GIFTS that employs two internal blackbody sources (290 K and 255 K) plus a space view sequenced at regular programmable intervals, this instrument level requirement places tight requirements on the blackbody temperature uncertainty (0.1 K) and emissivity uncertainty (0.001). The blackbody references are cavities that follow the UW Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer (AERI) design, scaled to the GIFTS beam size. The engineering model blackbody system was completed and fully calibrated at the University of Wisconsin and delivered for integration into the GIFTS Engineering Development Unit (EDU) at the Utah State Space Dynamics Laboratory. This paper presents a detailed description of the methodology used to establish the required temperature and emissivity performance, with emphasis on the traceability to NIST standards. In addition, blackbody temperature data are presented from the GIFTS EDU thermal vacuum tests that indicate excellent temperature stability. The delivered on-board blackbody calibration system exceeds performance goals - the cavity spectral emissivity is better than 0.998 with an absolute uncertainty of less than 0.001, and the absolute blackbody temperature uncertainty is better than 0.06 K.
© (2006) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Fred A. Best, Henry E. Revercomb, David C. Tobin, Robert O. Knuteson, Joseph K. Taylor, Donald J. Thielman, Douglas P. Adler, Mark W. Werner, Scott D. Ellington, John D. Elwell, Deron K. Scott, Gregory W. Cantwell, Gail E. Bingham, and William L. Smith "Performance verification of the Geosynchronous Imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (GIFTS) on-board blackbody calibration system", Proc. SPIE 6405, Multispectral, Hyperspectral, and Ultraspectral Remote Sensing Technology, Techniques, and Applications, 64050I (22 December 2006); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.698021
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Cited by 6 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Black bodies

Calibration

Temperature metrology

Resistors

Resistance

Imaging systems

Fourier transforms

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