HICO level 1b data - latitudes/longitudes not quite correct
Posted: Fri Jan 17, 2014 9:29 am America/New_York
Hi all,
I have another quick question with HICO. I am trying to map a scene (same one as in my last topic, H2011140064744.L1B_ISS), and it's mostly going great, except there appears to be a slight shift in the longitudes (and possibly a smaller in latitudes) from where they should be. This is using the datasets navigation/latitudes and navigation/longitudes.
I have, hopefully, attached an image to the end of this thread, zooming in on part of this scene. So this is at the North end of the Adriatic sea, and you can see the tip of Croatia in the south-east corner and tip of Slovenia in the north-east. There is clearly a shift between where the coastline appears in the image, and where the coastline is drawn, of about 0.02 degrees longitude (i.e. roughly 2 km). The latitude seems less skewed (the lower chunk of the coast lines up ok, but the bit more to the northeast of the image does not quite). I've checked using different reference ellipsoids for the map (did not make a visible differences), and different shoreline databases (this image uses the IDL in-built one but I have also tried the higher-resolution GSHHS database, which ends up lying pretty much on top of the IDL database).
Google Earth says that the lat/lon for the points I have scrawled 'A' and 'B' on (tips of the land) should be 45.49 N, 13.49 E and 45.53 N, 13.56 E respectively. So, confoundingly, these longitudes are about halfway in between where IDL has drawn the coastlines and where the data suggests the coastlines are. This leads me to suspect that (for this scene, at least) the longitudes in the file are off by something around 0.01-0.02 degrees. Note that at the other end of the scene, I see a shift of similar magnitude, and the coasts are very low-lying so there should be no appreciable shift in apparent position due to parallax. Note also that I am pretty confident that the error is not in the mapping software (i.e. it draws the points where it says it does, to within the size of a data pixel).
Do you have any suggestions for what could be going on here? Am I doing something wrong? Or is the HICO geolocation not expected to be accurate to that level?
Thanks,
Andy
[img]ftp://windhoek.nascom.nasa.gov/pub/asayer/foroc_forum.png[/img]
I have another quick question with HICO. I am trying to map a scene (same one as in my last topic, H2011140064744.L1B_ISS), and it's mostly going great, except there appears to be a slight shift in the longitudes (and possibly a smaller in latitudes) from where they should be. This is using the datasets navigation/latitudes and navigation/longitudes.
I have, hopefully, attached an image to the end of this thread, zooming in on part of this scene. So this is at the North end of the Adriatic sea, and you can see the tip of Croatia in the south-east corner and tip of Slovenia in the north-east. There is clearly a shift between where the coastline appears in the image, and where the coastline is drawn, of about 0.02 degrees longitude (i.e. roughly 2 km). The latitude seems less skewed (the lower chunk of the coast lines up ok, but the bit more to the northeast of the image does not quite). I've checked using different reference ellipsoids for the map (did not make a visible differences), and different shoreline databases (this image uses the IDL in-built one but I have also tried the higher-resolution GSHHS database, which ends up lying pretty much on top of the IDL database).
Google Earth says that the lat/lon for the points I have scrawled 'A' and 'B' on (tips of the land) should be 45.49 N, 13.49 E and 45.53 N, 13.56 E respectively. So, confoundingly, these longitudes are about halfway in between where IDL has drawn the coastlines and where the data suggests the coastlines are. This leads me to suspect that (for this scene, at least) the longitudes in the file are off by something around 0.01-0.02 degrees. Note that at the other end of the scene, I see a shift of similar magnitude, and the coasts are very low-lying so there should be no appreciable shift in apparent position due to parallax. Note also that I am pretty confident that the error is not in the mapping software (i.e. it draws the points where it says it does, to within the size of a data pixel).
Do you have any suggestions for what could be going on here? Am I doing something wrong? Or is the HICO geolocation not expected to be accurate to that level?
Thanks,
Andy
[img]ftp://windhoek.nascom.nasa.gov/pub/asayer/foroc_forum.png[/img]