38
42 Sensitivity study
We have attempted to assess the impact of the variability of atmospheric parameters on surface reflectance
retrieval and NDVI computation. The sensitivity study investigates the most variable parameters (aerosol
optical thickness and water vapor content) and also the impact of variable ground elevation. The variability of
each parameter is tested independantly of the others. Results are compared to a reference case (Case 1).
4.2.1 Sensitivity to aerosol optical thickness
Figure 10 presents absolute difference when NDVI is computed from surface reflectances corrected for a
constant aerosol optical thickness ("tp = 0.05 at 550nm, Case 1) and for a latitude dependant optical depth
(Case 2). As expected, the maximum difference of NDVI is located in the tropical zone where Tp is two and
three times greater than its value in Case 1.
Figure 10: NDVI difference (NDVI2 - NDVI1) involved by different amount of aerosol, over the 20° E transect
(July). NDVI1 and NDVI2 refers to Cases 1 and 2 respectively.
4.22 Sensitivity to vapor water content
According to Faizoun and Dedieu, (1993), the temporal variability of the water vapor content is +/- 1 g cm'2
around the monthly mean climatological value in tropical regions where contents are variables and high. To
be close to observed variability of water vapor content, we modified the water vapor content by + or - 20 %
and assessed the impact of the fluctuation on NDVI (Fig. 11). In this case, the optical thickness is constant and
set to those of the Case 1.
Figure 11: Relative difference of NDVI along the 20° transect in July when water vapor content is modified
by +20% and -20% around climatology.
The relative difference is expressed by 100.0*(NDVI-NDVl20%)l NDVI.
Relative variation on NDVI induced by a +/-20 % change on water vapor content is globally low, less than 5
%. The highest variation occurs in areas where the NIR reflectance is large, since only channel 2 is strongly
dependant on water vapor absorption.
423 Taking into account ground elevation
SMAC model has been modified to take into account ground elevation as a new input parameter. First, we
modified 5S subroutines as specified in Teillet and San ter (1991) and then adapted SMAC parameterization of
optical thickness (Rayleigh and aerosols) and gazeous transmissions as a function of pressure. Rayleigh and
aerosols optical thicknesses defined in Case 1 are now supposed to be optical thicknesses at sea level. For a
given location, the;
simulation is referei
When ground eleval
0.008 for molecule:
case, only oxygen l
water climatology
difference of 0.05 a
0 18 R«yt*tgh
0 18 --AEROSOL
$0 -80 -40
Figure 12: Molecul
optical thicknesses
for relief (Case 3).
43 Temporal mom
One may wonder if
an example, Figure
nearly four years
atmospheric correcl
Although part of th
study show that ad
variability are i) res
scan angle; iii) surf
for long term studie
Figure 14: Tempon
5. CONCLUSION
Correction of atmt
stratospheric aerosc
of NDVI, when c<
atmospheric charac
uncertainities are d
elevation effects ai
temporal signal, bu