Modeling the impact of spectral sensor configurations on the FLD retrieval accuracy of sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence
Chlorophyll fluorescence is related to photosynthesis and can serve as a remote sensing proxy for estimating
photosynthetic energy conversion and carbon uptake. Recent advances in sensor technology allow remote
measurements of the sun-induced chlorophyll fluorescence signal (Fs) at leaf and canopy scale. The
commonly used Fraunhofer Line Depth (FLD) principle exploits spectrally narrow atmospheric oxygen
absorption bands and relates Fs to the difference of the absorption feature depth of a fluorescensing and a
non-fluorescensing surface. However, due to the nature of these narrow bands, Fs retrieval results depend not
only on vegetation species type or environmental conditions, but also on instrument technology and
processing algorithms. Thus, an evaluation of all influencing factors and their separate quantification is
required to further improve Fs retrieval and to allow a reproducible interpretation of Fs signals.
Here we present a modeling study that isolates and quantifies the impacts of sensor characteristics, such as
spectral sampling interval (SSI), spectral resolution (SR), signal to noise ratio (SNR), and spectral shift (SS) on
the accuracy of Fs measurements in the oxygen A band centered at 760 nm (O2-A). Modeled high resolution
radiance spectra associated with known Fs were spectrally resampled, taking into consideration the various
sensor properties. Fs was retrieved using the three most common FLD retrieval methods, namely the original
FLD method (sFLD), the modified FLD (3FLD) and the improved FLD (iFLD). The analysis investigates
parameter ranges, which are representative for field and airborne instruments currently used in Fs research
(e.g., ASD FieldSpec, OceanOptics HR, AirFLEX, AISA, APEX, CASI, and MERIS).
Our results show that the most important parameter affecting the retrieval accuracy is SNR, SR accounts
for≤40% of the error, the SSI for≤12%, and SS for≤7% of the error. A trade-off study revealed that high SR can
partly compensate for low SNR. There is a strong interrelation between all parameters and the impact of
specific parameters can compensate or amplify the influence of others. Hence, the combination of all
parameters must be considered by the evaluation of sensors and their potential for Fs retrieval. In general, the
standard FLD method strongly overestimates Fs, while 3FLD and iFLD provide a more accurate estimation of
Fs. We conclude that technical sensor specifications and the retrieval methods cause a significant variability in
retrieved Fs signals. Results are intended to be one relevant component of the total uncertainty budget of Fs
retrieval and have to be considered in the interpretation of retrieved Fs signals.
DAMM Alexander;
ERLER Andre;
HILLEN Walter;
MERONI Michele;
SCHAEPMAN Michael;
VERHOEF Wout;
RASCHER Uwe;
2011-06-16
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
JRC65320
0034-4257,
https://publications.jrc.ec.europa.eu/repository/handle/JRC65320,
10.1016/j.rse.2011.03.011,
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