Satellite-Earth remote sensor scatter effects on Earth scene radiometric accuracy

A general modelling formalism is used to extend near-field point spread function (PSF) measurements over a wide-field off-axis angular range, covering a dynamic range of 5 to 6 orders of magnitude, using bidirectional reflectance distribution function (BRDF) measurements of the scan mirror and other key optical elements. Line spread function (LSF) model results were compared with measured near-field LSF measurements for the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) of the Earth Observing System (EOS), demonstrating excellent agreement between model and measurements. When realistic effects of sensor scattered light are taken into account, significant radiometric bias errors are produced near high-contrast structured scenes (e.g. bright clouds over dark oceans and land; broken snow and ice scenes). Image restoration using an asymptotically exact PSF is shown to produce results significantly different from those produced by traditional near-field 5 × 5, 7 × 7, ..., PSF kernel matrix inversion techniques. The results reported have implications for future remote-sensor specifications and testing, in-flight and surface-based calibration comparisons, and the assessment of radiometric bias errors in the presence of moderate- to high-contrast Earth scenes.