The primary responsibility within the First International Satellite Land Surface Climatology Project (ISLSCP) Field Experiment (FIFE) for understanding the radiometric properties of the remote sensing instrumentation and the atmospheric optical properties affecting measurements with these instruments rested within the atmospheric corrections and radiometric calibration subgroup of FIFE, called the correction/calibration group for short. Specific activities included (1) calibration of remote sensing instrumentation used on aircraft and surface platforms, (2) formulation of recommendations for calibrating data from satellite sensors, (3) measurement and analysis of atmospheric properties, (4) development and evaluation of radiative transfer algorithms which perform the atmospheric correction of remotely sensed data, and (5) derivation and evaluation of surface properties such as reflectances and temperatures. A review of the activities performed by this group and a discussion of the importance of these activities in retrieving surface parameters is presented here. ¿ American Geophysical Union 1992 |