MODIS
Introduction
There are two MODIS Satellites, Aqua and Terra.
MODIS Aqua
Sea surface color, temperature, and derivative images
The following examples assume you want to import multiple images at once, and so use shell scripting loops.
SST (Level 3)
Get the data
- Get data in HDF4 format from http://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/PRODUCTS/L3_sst.html
File names look like: A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4
- key:
* A: MODIS/Aqua * 2002: Year at start * 353: Julian day at start * 2002: Year at end * 360: Julian day at end * L3m: Level 3 data, mapped (Plate carrée) * 8D: 8 day ensemble * SST: Sea Surface Temperature product * 4: 4.6km pixel size (8640x4320 image, 2.5 minute resolution)
Decompress
bzip2 -d A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4.bz2
Check
- Use GDAL's gdalinfo tool to view the HDF file's meta-data.
gdalinfo A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4
Example of SST metadata from gdalinfo:
Parameter=Sea Surface Temperature Measure=Mean Units=deg-C Scaling Equation=(Slope*l3m_data) + Intercept = Parameter value Slope=0.000717185 Intercept=-2 Scaled Data Minimum=-2 Scaled Data Maximum=45 Data Minimum=-1.999999 Data Maximum=37.06 Subdatasets: SUBDATASET_1_NAME=HDF4_SDS:UNKNOWN:"A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4":0 SUBDATASET_1_DESC=[4320x8640] l3m_data (16-bit unsigned integer) SUBDATASET_2_NAME=HDF4_SDS:UNKNOWN:"A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4":1 SUBDATASET_2_DESC=[4320x8640] l3m_qual (8-bit unsigned integer)
Import
GRASS can be quite strict about moving maps around between differing map projections. Because GDAL does not automatically georeference HDF4 images, we need to apply the georeferencing information manually. This is a slight chore, but means fewer errors due to projection mis-matches later on. Everything we need to know is given in the data file's meta-data, as seen with gdalinfo.
Method 1
Use GDAL tools to prepare the dataset and create a GeoTiff which can be directly imported into GRASS.
- Create a Lat/Lon GRASS location and mapset
- Plate carrée, or WGS84? -- Does it matter with data at the km scale?
- Use gdal_translate to extract the desired data array from the HDF4 file and convert into a GeoTiff. While creating the GeoTiff specify the map projection, bounding box, and no-data information. Then import this GeoTiff using the r.in.gdal module. In this example we set the projection to be lat/lon WGS84 (EPSG code 4326), even though this may not be entirely correct.
for file in A*SST_4 ; do echo "map: $file" gdal_translate -a_srs "+init=epsg:4326" -a_nodata 65535 \ -a_ullr -180 90 180 -90 -co "COMPRESS=PACKBITS" \ HDF4_SDS:UNKNOWN:"$file":0 ${file}_prep.tif r.in.gdal in=${file}_prep.tif out=$file done
Method 2
Import raw HDF4 data into a XY location, clean it up, then copy into a lat/lon location. This is more work than method 1 but demonstrates using GRASS tools to do the manipulation instead of GDAL tools (the result should be the same).
Extract
Because the HDF4 data file contains multiple data arrays we need to extract the one we are interested in. In this example we extract the "data" layer but not the "quality" layer, and output a GeoTIFF file using GDAL's gdal_translate tool, using the appropriate SUBDATASET NAME: '
for file in *SST_4 ; do gdal_translate HDF4_SDS:UNKNOWN:"$file":0 ${file}_unproj.tif done
Import
- Create a simple XY GRASS location and mapset
- Import the imagery and set image bounds and resolution:
for file in *unproj.tif ; do BASE=`basename $file _unproj.tif` echo "map: $file" r.in.gdal in=$file out=$BASE r.region $BASE n=90 s=-90 w=-180 e=180 done
- Check:
g.list rast r.info A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4
- Convert the simple XY location into a Lat/Lon location
- Plate carrée, or WGS84? -- Does it matter with data at the km scale?
- Modify the location's projection settings with g.setproj? (run that from the PERMANENT mapset)
Hack: after import move the mapset dir into a world_ll location, then edit the mapset's WIND file and change the proj: line from 0 to 3. (0 is unprojected, 3 is LL) You also have to edit each file header in the $MAPSET/cellhd/ directory.
- Remove NULLs
for map in `g.mlist rast pat=*SST_4` ; do r.null $map setnull=65535 done
Method 3
Like method 2 above, but using i.rectify instead of moving the mapset manually. See the more detailed explanation in the Chlorophyll section below.
Processing
- Convert to temperature in degrees C. Note slope and intercept are taken from the image's metadata using gdalinfo.
for map in `g.mlist rast pat=*SST_4` ; do echo "$map" g.region rast=$map #r.info -r $map Slope=0.000717185 Intercept=-2 r.mapcalc "${map}.degC = ($Slope * $map) + $Intercept" r.support "${map}.degC" units="deg-C" #r.colors "${map}.degC" color=bcyr # fairly nice done
- Check:
r.info A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4.degC r.univar A20023532002360.L3m_8D_SST_4.degC
Set colors
Although the standard bcyr color map looks nice, for a very nice image we can use Goddard's OceanColor palettes from http://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/PRODUCTS/colorbars.html
Those are given in 0-255 range, the imported HDF4 data is 0-65535, and the converted temperatures are -2-45 deg C.
- Use the UNIX awk tool to convert each color rule with the same scaling function we used to convert the data, and save it to a rules file:
# scale 0-255 to 0-65535 and then convert to temperature values echo "# Color rules for MODIS SST" > palette_sst.gcolors Slope=0.000717185 Intercept=-2 cat palette_sst.txt | grep -v '^#' | \ awk -v Slope=$Slope -v Intercept=$Intercept \ '{ printf("%f %d:%d:%d\n", \ (Slope * (($1 +1)^2 -1) + Intercept), $2, $3, $4)}' \ >> palette_sst.gcolors echo "nv black" >> palette_sst.gcolors # better: edit last rule to be 45.000719 206:206:206
The processed color rules file is here: [1]
- Apply color rules to imported maps:
for map in `g.mlist rast pat=*SST_4` ; do r.colors "${map}.degC" rules=palette_sst.gcolors done
Chlorophyll-a (Level 3)
Get the data
- Get data in HDF4 format from http://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/PRODUCTS/L3_chlo.html
File names look like: A20023352002365.L3m_MO_CHLO_4
- key:
* A: MODIS/Aqua * 2002: Year at start * 335: Julian day at start * 2002: Year at end * 365: Julian day at end * L3m: Level 3 data, mapped (Plate carrée) * MO: One month ensemble * CHLO: Chlorophyll a concentration product * 4: 4.6km pixel size (8640x4320 image, 2.5 minute resolution)
Decompress
bzip2 -d A20023352002365.L3m_MO_CHLO_4.bz2
Check
- Use GDAL's gdalinfo tool to view the HDF file's meta-data.
gdalinfo A20023352002365.L3m_MO_CHLO_4
Example of CHLO metadata from gdalinfo:
Parameter=Chlorophyll a concentration Measure=Mean Units=mg m^-3 Scaling=logarithmic Scaling Equation=Base**((Slope*l3m_data) + Intercept) = Parameter value Base=10 Slope=5.813776e-05 Intercept=-2 Scaled Data Minimum=0.01 Scaled Data Maximum=64.5654 Data Minimum=0.002637 Data Maximum=99.99774
Import
Method 1
- Create a Lat/Lon GRASS location and mapset
- Plate carrée, or WGS84? -- Does it matter with data at the km scale?
- Use gdal_translate to convert the HDF4 data into a GeoTiff, and specify map projection, bounding box, and no-data information. Then import this GeoTiff using the r.in.gdal module. In this example we set the projection to be lat/lon WGS84 (EPSG code 4326), even though this may not be entirely correct.
for file in A*_MO_CHLO_4 ; do echo "map: $file" gdal_translate -a_srs "+init=epsg:4326" -a_nodata 65535 \ -a_ullr -180 90 180 -90 -co "COMPRESS=PACKBITS" \ $file ${file}_prep.tif r.in.gdal in=${file}_prep.tif out=$file done
Method 2
- Create a simple XY GRASS location and mapset
- Import the imagery and set image bounds and resolution:
for file in A*_MO_CHLO_4 ; do echo "map: $file" r.in.gdal in=$file out=$file r.region $file n=90 s=-90 w=-180 e=180 done
- Check:
g.list rast r.info A20023352002365.L3m_MO_CHLO_4
- Convert the simple XY location into a Lat/Lon location
- Plate carrée, or WGS84? -- Does it matter with data at the km scale?
- Modify the location's projection settings with g.setproj? (run that from the PERMANENT mapset)
Hack:: after import move the mapset dir into a world_ll location, then edit the mapset's WIND file and change the proj: line from 0 to 3. (0 is unprojected, 3 is LL) You also have to edit each file header in the $MAPSET/cellhd/ directory.
- Remove NULLs
for map in `g.mlist rast pat=*MO_CHLO_4` ; do r.null $map setnull=65535 done
Method 3
Like method 2 above, but instead of moving the mapset directory in the file system use i.rectify to move the maps into the target Lat/Lon location. After importing the images, setting their bounds, and removing NULLs, add all images to an imagery group with the i.group module. Run i.target and select a lat/lon location. The idea here is to run i.rectify with a first-order transform, where the transform uses a scaling factor of 1.0 and rotation of 0.0, i.e. no change at all. The trick is to set those. Usually you would use i.points or the GUI georeferencing tool to set those, and here you can add a few points by hand if you like. But the POINTS file in the group's data directory should use identical coordinates for both source and destination. Hack: edit the POINTS file by hand to make it so, using the four corners and 0,0 at the center of the image. Finally run i.rectify to push the image into the target location.
Processing
- Convert to chlorophyll a concentration. Note slope and intercept are taken from the image's metadata using gdalinfo.
for map in `g.mlist rast pat=*MO_CHLO_4` ; do echo "$map" g.region rast=$map #r.info -r $map Slope=5.813776e-05 Intercept=-2 r.mapcalc "${map}.chlor_A = 10^(($Slope * $map) + $Intercept)" r.support "${map}.chlor_A" units="mg m^-3" #r.colors -e "${map}.chlor_A" color=bcyr # :-( done
- Check:
r.info A20023352002365.L3m_MO_CHLO_4.chlor_A r.univar A20023352002365.L3m_MO_CHLO_4.chlor_A
Set colors
The chlorophyll maps are logarithmic which poses some challenges to rendering nice colors. (the unconverted import image displays nicely with a linear color map) We can use Goddard's OceanColor palettes from http://oceancolor.gsfc.nasa.gov/PRODUCTS/colorbars.html
Those are given in 0-255 range, the imported HDF4 data is 0-65535, and the converted chlorophyll a concentration is 0-65 mg/m^3.
- Use the UNIX awk tool to convert each color rule with the same exponential function we used to convert the data, and save it to a rules file:
# scale 0-255 to 0-65535 and then convert to chlor-a values echo "# Color rules for MODIS Chloropyll-a" > palette_chl_etc.gcolors Slope=5.813776e-05 Intercept=-2 cat palette_chl_etc.txt | grep -v '^#' | \ awk -v Slope=$Slope -v Intercept=$Intercept \ '{ printf("%f %d:%d:%d\n", \ 10^((Slope * (($1 +1)^2 -1)) + Intercept), $2, $3, $4)}' \ >> palette_chl_etc.gcolors echo "nv black" >> palette_chl_etc.gcolors # better: edit last rule to be 64.574061 100:0:0
The processed color rules file is here: [2]
- Apply color rules to imported maps:
for map in `g.mlist rast pat=*MO_CHLO_4` ; do r.colors "${map}.chlor_A" rules=palette_chl_etc.gcolors done
SeaWiFS
From OceanColor gsfc.nasa.gov
- the SeaWiFS Standard Mapped Products are already geocoded in WGS84 so should be easy to load into a lat/lon location with r.in.gdal. (at least this is true for PAR maps)
Removing holes
Cloud cover or technical problems often causes there to be some gaps in the data. GRASS has a r.fillnulls module which uses spline interpolation to fill in these small gaps. These holes are left in the data for a reason, so check if it is appropriate for your analysis before removing them. Also note that the areas around the holes may be of low quality and using them as the starting point for filling the holes just spreads the error wider.
The first step is to create a mask of the sea, i.e. the area which it is valid to interpolate over. To do this we overlay a time series of satellite images and see which areas are permanently no data.
- Overlay all maps; the data will be mixed up and bogus but the spatial coverage will be informative
r.patch in=`g.mlist -r rast pat='A200.*4$' sep=,` out=all_sat_images_stacked
- Create a 0/1 mask layer showing areas of sea, and label categories
r.mapcalc "sea_mask = if( isnull(all_sat_images_stacked), 0, 1)" r.category sea_mask rules=- << EOF 0:Land 1:Sea EOF g.remove all_sat_images_stacked
The next step is to perform the filling operation. To speed up processing, we first temporarily fill known land areas with a value as there is no point interpolating over those gaps. To avoid interpolation overshoots, smear coastal values slightly inland before interpolation. After the holes are filled we reapply the mask to again remove those areas. As the r.fillnulls step can take some time, it is advisable to use g.region to zoom into an area of interest first.
for map in `g.mlist rast pat=*SST_4.degC` ; do r.grow in=$map out=${map}.grown radius=5 r.mapcalc "tmp_landfill = if( isnull($map) && sea_mask == 1, \ null(), if( isnull(${map}.grown), 0, ${map}.grown) )" r.fillnulls in=tmp_landfill out=${map}.filled_tmp g.copy sea_mask,MASK r.mapcalc "${map}.filled = ${map}.filled_tmp" g.remove tmp_landfill,${map}.grown,${map}.filled_tmp,MASK done