Description
The ECOsystem Spaceborne Thermal Radiometer Experiment on Space Station (ECOSTRESS) mission measures the temperature of plants to better understand how much water plants need and how they respond to stress. ECOSTRESS is attached to the International Space Station (ISS) and collects data globally between 52° N and 52° S latitudes. A map of the acquisition coverage can be found in Figure 2 on the ECOSTRESS website.
The ECOSTRESS Gridded Evapotranspiration Instantaneous and Daytime L3 Global 70 m (ECO_L3G_JET) Version 2 data product provides instantaneous canopy transpiration, leaf surface evaporation, and soil moisture evaporation using the Priestley-Taylor formula. This data product is mosaicked from the L3 tiled JET (ECO_L3T_JET) product, projected to a globally snapped 0.0006° grid, and has a spatial resolution of 70 meters (m).
The ECO_L3G_JET Version 2 data product contains 12 layers distributed in an HDF5 format file including ETdaily, ETinstUncertainty, PTJPLSMinst, STICinst, MOD16inst, BESSinst, STICcanopy, PTJPLSMcanopy, PTJPLSMinterception, PTJPLSMsoil, cloud mask, and water mask.
Known Issues
- Data acquisition gap: ECOSTRESS was launched on June 29, 2018, and moved to autonomous science operations on August 20, 2018, following a successful in-orbit checkout period. On September 29, 2018, ECOSTRESS experienced an anomaly with its primary mass storage unit (MSU). ECOSTRESS has a primary and secondary MSU (A and B). On December 5, 2018, the instrument was switched to the secondary MSU and science operations resumed. On March 14, 2019, the secondary MSU experienced a similar anomaly, temporarily halting science acquisitions. On May 15, 2019, a new data acquisition approach was implemented, and science acquisitions resumed. To optimize the new acquisition approach TIR bands 2, 4, and 5 are being downloaded. The data products are as previously, except the bands not downloaded contain fill values (L1 radiance and L2 emissivity). This approach was implemented from May 15, 2019, through April 28, 2023.
- Data acquisition gap: From February 8 to February 16, 2020, an ECOSTRESS instrument issue resulted in a data anomaly that created striping in band 4 (10.5 micron). These data products have been reprocessed and are available for download. No ECOSTRESS data were acquired on February 17, 2020, due to the instrument being in SAFEHOLD. Data acquired following the anomaly have not been affected.
- Data acquisition: ECOSTRESS has now successfully returned to 5-band mode after being in 3-band mode since 2019. This feature was successfully enabled following a Data Processing Unit firmware update (version 4.1) to the payload on April 28, 2023. To better balance contiguous science data scene variables, 3-band collection is currently being interleaved with 5-band acquisitions over the orbital day/night periods.
- Solar Array Obstruction: Some ECOSTRESS scenes may be affected by solar array obstructions from the International Space Station (ISS), potentially impacting data quality of obstructed pixels. The 'FieldOfViewObstruction' metadata field is included in all Version 2 products to indicate possible obstructions:
- Before October 24, 2024 (orbits prior to 35724): The field is present but was not populated and does not reliably identify affected scenes.
- On or after October 24, 2024 (starting with orbit 35724): The field is populated and generally accurate, except for late December 2024, when a temporary processing error may have caused false positives.
- A list of scenes confirmed to be affected by obstructions is available and is recommended for verifying historical data (before October 24, 2024) and scenes from late December 2024.
- The ISS native pointing information is coarse relative to ECOSTRESS pixels, so ECOSTRESS geolocation is improved through image matching with a basemap. Metadata in the L1B_GEO file shows the success of this geolocation improvement, using categorizations "best", "good", "suspect", and "poor". We recommend that users use only "best" and "good" scenes for evaluations where geolocation is important (e.g., comparison to field sites). For some scenes, this metadata is not reflected in the higher-level products (e.g., land surface temperature, evapotranspiration, etc.). While this metadata is always available in the geolocation product, to save users additional download, we have produced a summary text file that includes the geolocation quality flags for all scenes from launch to March 2025. After this date, all higher-level products will reflect the geolocation quality flag correctly (the field name is GeolocationAccuracyQA).
Improvements/Changes from Previous Version
- This product utilizes a modified version of the Priestley-Taylor Jet Propulsion Laboratory (PT-JPL) model from the ECOSTRESS Evapotranspiration PT-JPL Daily L3 Global 70 m (ECO3ETPTJPL) Version 1 data product which incorporates soil moisture as an added constraint (PT-JPL-SM). In addition to PT-JPL-SM, this data product includes the outputs from other models not included in ECO3ETPTJPL v001, details on what is included can be found in Section 5.4 of the User Guide.
Product Summary
Citation
Citation is critically important for dataset documentation and discovery. This dataset is openly shared, without restriction, in accordance with the EOSDIS Data Use and Citation Guidance.
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Documents
ALGORITHM THEORETICAL BASIS DOCUMENT (ATBD) | The ATBD provides physical theory and mathematical procedures for the calculations used to produce the data products. | |
GENERAL DOCUMENTATION | List of scenes confirmed to affected by obstructions. | |
GENERAL DOCUMENTATION | Summary text file that includes the geolocation quality flags for all scenes from launch to March 2025. | |
HOW-TO | The ECOSTRESS Data Resources GitHub repository provides guides, short how-tos, and tutorials to help users access and work with ECOSTRESS data. | |
USER'S GUIDE | The technical information in the User's Guide enables users to interpret and use the data products. |