Authors:
Prof. Dr. Robert Wright | Hawaii Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, University of Hawaii at Manoa | United States
Dr. Paul Lucey | Hawaii Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, University of Hawaii at Manoa
Dr. Miguel Nunes | Hawaii Space Flight Laboratory, University of Hawaii at Manoa | United States
Dr. Sarath Gunapala | Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institue of Technology | United States
Chiara Ferrari-Wong | Hawaii Institute of Geophysics and Planetology, University of Hawaii at Manoa | United States
Dr. Sir Rafol | Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institue of Technology
Dr. David Ting | Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institue of Technology
Dr. Thomas George | SaraniaSat | United States
The HyTI (Hyperspectral Thermal Imager) mission, funded by NASA’s Earth Science Technology Office InVEST (In-Space Validation of Earth Science Technologies) program, will demonstrate how high spectral and spatial long-wave infrared image data can be acquired from a 6U CubeSat platform. The mission will use a spatially modulated interferometric imaging technique to produce spectro-radiometrically calibrated image cubes, with 25 channels between 8 to 10.7 microns, at 13 wavenumber resolution), at a ground sample distance of approximately 60 m. The HyTI performance model indicates narrow band NEdTs of less than0 .3 K. The small form factor of HyTI is made possible via the use of a no-moving-parts Fabry-Perot interferometer, and JPL’s cryogenically-cooled (NEdT requirement can be met at dark current associated with an FPA temperature of 68 K) HOT-BIRD FPA technology. Launch is scheduled for summer 2022. The value of HyTI to Earth scientists will be demonstrated via on-board processing of the raw instrument data to generate L1 and L2 products, with a focus on rapid delivery of data regarding volcanic degassing, and land surface temperature.
HyTI uses JPL's T2SLS ‘HOT-BIRD’ focal plane array. T2SLS detectors exhibit high levels of temporal stability with respect to both gain and offset, making them an ideal candidate for HyTI, as the 6U form-factor left no room for an onboard radiometric calibration mechanism. Rather, prior to launch, the HyTI instrument will be calibrated by deriving look-up tables relating target radiance and sensor response for a suite of FPA integration times and temperatures. On-orbit, data will be calibrated to spectral radiance using these gain LUTs. It is anticipated that radiometric offset (obtained via deep space look) will be updated each orbit.
During operations the HyTI calibration will be validated using three sources: i) occasional Lunar imaging events, ii) vicarious calibration with Landsat TIIRS and Terra ASTER data sets, and iii) direct validation using the Jet Propulsion laboratory’s Lake Tahoe and Salton Sea calibration sites. This will be important, as HyTI will process from L0 to L1 on-orbit, and so the calibration must be validated (and if required, updated) in a timely manner (as most L0 data will not be transmitted to ground or archived).
In this presentation we will provide an overview of the HyTI measurement approach, the onboard data reduction and calibration approach and the spacecraft design.