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Calculating satellite zenith angle from pre-KLM AVHRR 1B data [message #24787] Fri, 20 April 2001 10:35 Go to next message
Kate A. Edwards is currently offline  Kate A. Edwards
Messages: 1
Registered: April 2001
Junior Member
I have NOAA-14 AVHRR Level 1B LAC files that I obtained from the Satellite
Active Archive. I would like to learn how to calculate the satellite
zenith angle for this pre-KLM satellite data, since it is not included in
the data record. (For the KLM satellites, it is included). Can the
satellite zenith angle be derived from other variables in the data record?
If so, could you please give me a reference for how this is done? It is
required in algorithms for deriving sea surface temperature.

Thank you,
Kate

--------------------------
Dr. Kate Edwards
University of Washington
School of Oceanography
Box 357940
Seattle, Washington 98195-7940
phone: 206-543-1866
fax: 206-543-6073
web page for Juan de Fuca work: http://www.ocean.washington.edu/~kate
web page for West Coast headlands work: http://www-ccs.ucsd.edu/~kate
Re: Calculating satellite zenith angle from pre-KLM AVHRR 1B data [message #24851 is a reply to message #24787] Wed, 25 April 2001 05:44 Go to previous message
Jerry Gorline is currently offline  Jerry Gorline
Messages: 1
Registered: April 2001
Junior Member
"Kate A. Edwards" wrote:
>
> I have NOAA-14 AVHRR Level 1B LAC files that I obtained from the Satellite
> Active Archive. I would like to learn how to calculate the satellite
> zenith angle for this pre-KLM satellite data, since it is not included in
> the data record. (For the KLM satellites, it is included). Can the
> satellite zenith angle be derived from other variables in the data record?
> If so, could you please give me a reference for how this is done? It is
> required in algorithms for deriving sea surface temperature.

Here is a site that may be of interest to you and mentions
software in the Land Analysis System (LAS)[1]. I have
limited experience with the NOAA Polar orbiters, but the
orbits are sun-synchronous. Each orbit takes about 103
minutes, so that the Earth rotates just enough for the next
pass. And you already knew that, but I still thinks it's
neat. The effective swath width is about 25 degrees, but
the AVHRR is sensitive to off-nadir angles of up to 55
degrees. NOAA maintains two satellites in complementary
orbits, with one crossing the equator at local solar times
of approximately 0730 and 1930, and the other at 0230 and
1430. The even-numbered satellites cover the "morning
orbit" (0730) and the odd-numbered satellites the "afternoon
orbit" (1430), except for NOAA 14. I believe that the LAS
software takes advantage of this sun-synchronous
configuration to compute the solar/satellite geometry and
hence the relative azimuth angle for each image pixel. I
hope this helps.

Regards,

Jerry

1. http://edc.usgs.gov/glis/hyper/guide/usavhrr#satellite
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