Daniel Mandl, Rob Sohlberg, Chris Justice, Stephen Ungar, Troy Ames, Stuart Frye, Steve Chien, Daniel Tran, Patrice Cappelaere, Linda Derezinski, Granville Paules, Don Sullivan, Liping Di, Stephan Kolitz
KEYWORDS: Sensors, Satellites, Surface plasmons, Web services, Internet, Web 2.0 technologies, Standards development, Data processing, Received signal strength, MODIS
This paper describes the work being managed by the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) Information System
Division (ISD) under a NASA Earth Science Technology Office (ESTO) Advanced Information System Technology
(AIST) grant to develop a modular sensor web architecture which enables discovery of sensors and workflows that can
create customized science via a high-level service-oriented architecture based on Open Geospatial Consortium (OGC)
Sensor Web Enablement (SWE) web service standards. These capabilities serve as a prototype to a user-centric
architecture for Global Earth Observing System of Systems (GEOSS). This work builds and extends previous sensor
web efforts conducted at NASA/GSFC using the Earth Observing 1 (EO-1) satellite and other low-earth orbiting
satellites.
The Hyperion Imaging Spectrometer is one of three principal instruments aboard the EO-1 spacecraft. Its mission as a technology demonstrator is to evaluate on-orbit issues for imaging spectroscopy and to assess the capabilities of a space- based imaging spectrometer for earth science and earth observation missions. For the latter activity, a science team has been selected, which is complemented by commercial applications teams. This paper will review the design, construction and calibration of the Hyperion instrument. The on-orbit plans and operations will be presented along with updated calibration and characterization measurements.
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