Datasets / OMI/Aura Level 1B VIS Zoom-in Geolocated Earthshine Radiances 1-orbit L2 Swath 13x12 km V003


OMI/Aura Level 1B VIS Zoom-in Geolocated Earthshine Radiances 1-orbit L2 Swath 13x12 km V003

Published By National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Issued over 9 years ago

US
beta

Summary

Type of release
a one-off release of a single dataset

Data Licence
Not Applicable

Content Licence
Creative Commons CCZero

Verification
automatically awarded

Description

The Level-1B (L1B) Radiance Product OML1BRVZ (Version-3) from the Aura-OMI is now available (http://disc.gsfc.nasa.gov/Aura/OMI/oml1brvz_v003.shtml) to public from the NASA GSFC Earth Sciences Data and Information Services Center (GES DISC). OMI calibrated and geolocated radiances for the channels in the UV1 (264-311 nm), UV2 (307-383 nm)and VIS(349-504) regions, spectral irradiances, calibration measurements, and all derived geophysical atmospheric products are archived at the NASA Goddard DAAC. (The shortname for this OMI Level-1B Product is OML1BRVZ) The lead algorithm scientist for this product is Dr. Marcel Dobber from the KNMI. The OMI Level 1B Visible Radiance Zoom-in Product OML1BRVZ contains geolocated Earth view spectral radiances from the VIS channel detectors in the wavelength range of 349 to 504 nm. The product contains the measurements that are taken once a month using the spatial zoom-in measurement modes (30 pixels covering 750 km swath width). In spatial zoom in mode the nadir ground pixel size is 13 x 12 km2 and measurements are available only for the wavelengths 306 to 432 nm. OML1BRVZ files are stored in EOS Hierarchical Data Format (HDF-EOS 2.4) which is based on HDF4. The radiance for the earth measurements (also referred as signal) and its precision are stored as a 16 bit mantissa and an 8-bit exponent. The signal can be computed using the equation: signal = signal_mantissa x 10 exponent . For the precision, the same exponent is used as for the signal. Each file contains data from the day lit portion of an orbit (~53 minutes) and is roughly 570 MB in size. There are approximately 14 orbits per day.