Airborne Visible/Infrared Imaging Spectrometer

Status

Status
Operational
Operated By
Facility
Replaced By

AVIRIS is the second in a series of imaging spectrometer instruments developed at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) for earth remote sensing. It is a unique optical sensor that delivers calibrated images of the upwelling spectral radiance in 224 contiguous spectral channels (bands) with wavelengths from 380 to 2510 nanometers. It uses scanning optics and four spectrometers to image a 677 pixel swath simultaneously in all 224 bands. AVIRIS has flown in North America, Europe, and portions of South America.

The AVIRIS sensor collects data that can be used for characterization of the Earth's surface and atmosphere from geometrically coherent spectroradiometric measurements. This data can be applied to studies in the fields of oceanography, environmental science, snow hydrology, geology, volcanology, soil and land management, atmospheric and aerosol studies, agriculture, and limnology. Applications under development include the assessment and monitoring of environmental hazards such as toxic waste, oil spills, and land/air/water pollution. With proper calibration and correction for atmospheric effects, the measurements can be converted to ground reflectance data which can then be used for quantitative characterization of surface features.

Instrument Type
Measurements
Recent Missions
(ER-2 - AFRC)
;
(ER-2 - AFRC)
Point(s) of Contact
(POC; PI),
(Co-I),
(Co-I),
Range of Measurement
Ground
Instrument Pointing
Nadir (directly downwards)Cross-track scanning
Swath Width
12000.00 m (at 20 km)
Horizontal Resolution
20.00 m (at 20 km)
Measurement Wavelengths
Data Delivery
6 hours to 6 weeks depending on requirements and budget balancing
Notes
Instantaneous field of view: 1 mrad
Total scan angle: 34°
Pixels / scan line: 677
Number of ports: 4
Digitization: 16 bits
Data rate: 22 MBPS
All data collection missions are coordinated through JPL.
TRL
9

 

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