Validation of Landsat 8 high resolution Sea Surface Temperature using surfers
Vanhellemont, Q; Brewin, RJW; Bresnahan, PJ; et al.Cyronak, T
Date: 1 December 2021
Journal
Estuarine Coastal and Shelf Science
Publisher
Elsevier
Publisher DOI
Abstract
Nearshore coastal waters are highly dynamic in both space and time. They can be difficult to sample using
conventional methods due to their shallow depth, tidal variability, and the presence of strong currents and
breaking waves. High resolution satellite sensors can be used to provide synoptic views of Surface Temperature
(ST), but ...
Nearshore coastal waters are highly dynamic in both space and time. They can be difficult to sample using
conventional methods due to their shallow depth, tidal variability, and the presence of strong currents and
breaking waves. High resolution satellite sensors can be used to provide synoptic views of Surface Temperature
(ST), but the performance of such ST products in the nearshore zone is poorly understood. Close to the
shoreline, the ST pixels can be influenced by mixed composition of water and land, as a result of the sensor’s
spatial resolution. This can cause thermal adjacency effects due to the highly different diurnal temperature
cycles of water bodies and land. Previously, temperature data collected during surfing sessions has been
proposed for validation of moderate resolution (1 km pixel size) satellite ST products. In this paper we use
surfing temperature data to validate three high resolution (100 m resampled to 30 m pixel size) ST products
derived from the Thermal InfraRed Sensor (TIRS) on board Landsat 8 (L8). ST was derived from Collection 1
and 2 Level 1 data (C1L1 and C2L1) using the Thermal Atmospheric Correction Tool (TACT), and was obtained
from the standard Collection 2 Level 2 product (USGS C2L2). This study represents one of the first evaluations
of the new C2 products, both L1 and L2, released by USGS at the end of 2020. Using automated matchup and
image quality control, 88 matchups between L8/TIRS and surfers were identified, distributed across the NorthWestern semihemisphere. The unbiased Root Mean Squared Difference (uRMSD) between satellite and in situ
measurements was generally < 2 K, with warm biases (Mean Average Difference, MAD) of 1.7 K (USGS C2L2),
1.3 K (TACT C1L1) and 0.8 K (TACT C2L1). Large interquartile ranges of ST in 5 × 5 satellite pixels around the
matchup location were found for several images, especially for the summer matchups around the Californian
coast. By filtering on target stability the number of matchups reduced to 31, which halved the uRMSD across
the three methods (to around 1.1K), MAD were much lower, i.e. 1.1 K (USGS C2L2), 0.6 K (TACT C1L1), and
0.2 K (TACT C2L1). The larger biases of the C2L2 product compared to TACT C2L1 are caused as a result of: (1)
a lower emissivity value for water targets used in USGS C2L2, and (2) differences in atmospheric parameter
retrieval, mainly from differences in upwelling atmospheric radiance and lower atmospheric transmittance
retrieved by USGS C2L2. Additionally, tiling artefacts are present in the C2L2 product, which originate from
a coarser atmospheric correction process. Overall, the L8/TIRS derived ST product compares well with in situ
measurements made while surfing, and we found the best performing ST product for nearshore coastal waters
to be the Collection 2 Level 1 data processed with TACT.
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Except where otherwise noted, this item's licence is described as © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).