AIRMISR Level 1B
Entry Title: Airborne Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (AirMISR) Data from the Southern African Fire Atmosphere Research Initiative 2000 Field Campaign

Entry ID: AIRMISR_SAFARI_1
Field Campaigns
Description

The AIRMISR_SAFARI data were acquired on September 6, 7, 13 and 14, 2000 during the SAFARI 2000 campaign. The Southern African Fire Atmosphere Research Initiative (SAFARI) 2000 field campaign focused on the smoke and gases released into the environment of southern Africa by industrial, biological and man-made sources such as biomass burning. The area of study included Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Mozambique, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia, and Zimbabwe. The Airborne Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (AirMISR) is an airborne instrument for obtaining multi-angle imagery similar to that of the satellite-borne Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) instrument, which is designed to contribute to studies of the Earth's ecology and climate. AirMISR flies on the NASA ER-2 aircraft. The Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California built the instrument for NASA. Unlike the satellite-borne MISR instrument, which has nine cameras oriented at various angles, AirMISR uses a single camera in a pivoting gimbal mount. A data run by the ER-2 aircraft is divided into nine segments, each with the camera positioned to a MISR look angle. The gimbal rotates between successive segments, such that each segment acquires data over the same area on the ground as the previous segment. This process is repeated until all nine angles of the target area are collected. The swath width, which varies from 11 km in the nadir to 32 km at the most oblique angle, is governed by the camera's instantaneous field-of-view of 7 meters cross-track x 6 meters along-track in the nadir view and 21 meters x 55 meters at the most oblique angle. The along-track image length at each angle is dictated by the timing required to obtain overlap imagery at all angles, and varies from about 9 km in the nadir to 26 km at the most oblique angle. Thus, the nadir image dictates the area of overlap that is obtained from all nine angles. A complete flight run takes approximately 13 minutes. The 9 camera viewing angles are: 0 degrees or nadir 26.1 degrees, fore and aft 45.6 degrees, fore and aft 60.0 degrees, fore and aft 70.5 degrees, fore and aft. For each of the camera angles, images are obtained at 4 spectral bands. The spectral bands can be used to identify vegetation and aerosols, estimate surface reflectance and for ocean color studies. The center wavelengths of the 4 spectral bands are: 443 nanometers, blue 555 nanometers, green 670 nanometers, red 865 nanometers, near-infrared. Two types of AirMISR data products are available - the Level 1 Radiometric product (L1B1) and the Level 1 Georectified radiance product (L1B2).

DOI

10.5067/ASDC_DAAC/AIRMISR_SAFARI_1

Citation Styles for this Dataset
Resources and Documentation

Earthdata Forum

DOWNLOAD SOFTWARE

AirMISR L1B2/L2AS Coregistration Tool - Direct File Download (.tar)

MISR Paths Tool - Direct File Download (.kml)

AirMISR L1B2/L2AS Coregistration Tool IDL source code - Direct File Download (.pro)

AirMISR L1B2/L2AS Coregistration Tool IDL executable save file (use with the IDL Virtual Machine) - Direct File Download (.sav)

GET RELATED VISUALIZATION

ASDC List of MISR Imagery and Articles

AirMISR Campaign Imagery: AirMISR Red Band Browse Images from the SAFARI 2000 Field Campaign, September 6, 2000

GOTO WEB TOOL

Google Earth

PROJECT HOME PAGE

AirMISR project home page

ESPO home page for SAFARI 2000

MISR project home page

ORNL DAAC's Southern African Regional Science Initiative Project (SAFARI 2000) Project overview

VIEW RELATED INFORMATION
Keywords

From GCMD Science Keywords:
  • INFRARED RADIANCE
  • VISIBLE RADIANCE
  • Digital Camera Output
  • Radiance
  • NASA ER-2
Data Distribution

File Format(s):

HDF4

Note: "Get Dataset" is a link to our recommended order method. The down arrow will show you additional options.

Spatial Information

spatial-coverage-map
Spatial Coverage: (S: -24.69, N: -15.18), (W: 9.08, E: 31.49)
Spatial Coverage Type: Horizontal
Horizontal Resolution Range: 1 meter - < 30 meters
Coordinate System: Geodetic
Granule Spatial Representation: Geodetic
Locations

AFRICA SOUTHERN AFRICA
Temporal Information

Temporal Coverage: 2000-09-06 - 2000-09-14
Temporal Resolution: 40.8 microseconds
Platforms

Aircraft
NASA ER-2
NASA Earth Resources-2
AIRMISR
Airborne Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer
Metadata Dates

Created on 2001-05-21
Last updated on 2022-11-09