
doi: 10.1109/36.701075
The first Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) instrument is planned for launch by NASA in 1998. This instrument will provide a new and improved capability for terrestrial satellite remote sensing aimed at meeting the needs of global change research. The MODIS standard products will provide new and improved tools for moderate resolution land surface monitoring. These higher order data products have been designed to remove the burden of certain common types of data processing from the user community and meet the more general needs of global-to-regional monitoring, modeling, and assessment. The near-daily coverage of moderate resolution data from MODIS, coupled with the planned increase in high-resolution sampling from Landsat 7, will provide a powerful combination of observations. The full potential of MODIS will be realized once a stable and well-calibrated time-series of multispectral data has been established. In this paper the proposed MODIS standard products for land applications are described along with the current plans for data quality assessment and product validation.
monitoring, satellite remote sensing, Earth Observing System-Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (EOS-MODIS), Physical Sciences and Mathematics, global change
monitoring, satellite remote sensing, Earth Observing System-Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (EOS-MODIS), Physical Sciences and Mathematics, global change
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