Operational Land Imager
The Operational Land Imager (OLI) is a Ball Aerospace & Technologies built instrument that fly on Landsat Data Continuity Mission (LDCM). LDCM is the successor to LandSat 7 and was launched in 2013.[1]
OLI uses 4-mirror telescope with fixed mirrors. The OLI is a Push broom scanner.
Spectral Band | Wavelength | Resolution |
---|---|---|
Band 1 - Coastal / Aerosol | 0.433 - 0.453 µm | 30 m |
Band 2 - Blue | 0.450 - 0.515 µm | 30 m |
Band 3 - Green | 0.525 - 0.600 µm | 30 m |
Band 4 - Red | 0.630 - 0.680 µm | 30 m |
Band 5 - Near Infrared | 0.845 - 0.885 µm | 30 m |
Band 6 - Short Wavelength Infrared | 1.560 - 1.660 µm | 30 m |
Band 7 - Short Wavelength Infrared | 2.100 - 2.300 µm | 30 m |
Band 8 - Panchromatic | 0.500 - 0.680 µm | 15 m |
Band 9 - Cirrus | 1.360 - 1.390 µm | 30 m |
See also
References
- ↑ Gerace, Aaron D.; Schott, John R.; Nevins, Robert (2013). "Increased potential to monitor water quality in the near-shore environment with Landsat's next-generation satellite" (Open access - full text article available). Journal of Applied Remote Sensing 7: 073558. Bibcode:2013JARS....7.3558G. doi:10.1117/1.JRS.7.073558.
- ↑ NASA. "Landsat Data Continuity Mission Brochure". Retrieved 12 February 2013.
External links
- Ball Aerospace
- OLI at NASA
- The Operational Land Imager: Overview and Performance // Ball Aerospace, 2011