MISR Level 2 Surface parameters V003

MIL2ASLS_3 is the Multi-angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR) Level 2 Land Surface parameters version 3 data product. It contains a variety of information on the Earth's surface, such as hemispherical directional reflectance factor (HDRF), bihemispheric reflectance (BHR) (i.e., albedo), bidirectional reflectance factor (BRF), directional hemispherical reflectance (DHR), BRF model parameters, Fractional absorbed Photosynthetically Active Radiation (FPAR), and terrain-referenced view and illumination angles. A surface retrieval is conducted on regions where valid land aerosol retrieval exists. The retrieval uses the corrected equivalent reflectances, retrieved aerosol parameters, and auxiliary information from the Simulated MISR Ancillary Radiative Transfer (SMART) dataset. The spectral and Photosynthetically Active spectral Region (PAR)-integrated BHR and DHR are retrieved, along with the spectral land HDRF and BRF and BRF model parameters, for all valid land and inland water subregions. Subregion surface classification leaf area index (LAI) and regional FPAR are also determined. Subregion variability is also calculated for land regions. Data collection for this product is ongoing. This collection contains the Leaf Area Index (LAI). The entire mission has been reprocessed to version 3. The revision to the aerosol and land surface products includes both product format and significant algorithm changes, which impact the quality and performance of both aerosol and land surface retrievals. The MISR instrument consists of nine push-broom cameras that measure radiance in four spectral bands. Global coverage is achieved in nine days. The cameras are arranged with one camera pointing toward the nadir, four forward, and four aftward. It takes seven minutes for all nine cameras to view the same surface location. The view angles relative to the surface reference ellipsoid are 0, 26.1, 45.6, 60.0, and 70.5 degrees. The spectral band shapes are nominally Gaussian, centered at 443, 555, 670, and 865 nm. MISR is designed to view Earth with cameras in 9 different directions. As the instrument flies overhead, all nine cameras successfully imaged each piece of Earth's surface below in 4 wavelengths (blue, green, red, and near-infrared). MISR aims to improve our understanding of the effects of sunlight on Earth and distinguish different types of clouds, particles, and surfaces. Specifically, MISR monitors the monthly, seasonal, and long-term trends in three areas: 1) amount and type of atmospheric particles (aerosols), including those formed by natural sources and by human activities; 2) amounts, types, and heights of clouds, and 3) distribution of land surface cover, including vegetation canopy structure.

Data and Resources

Additional Info

Field Value
Maintainer Earthdata Forum
Last Updated April 6, 2026, 20:31 (UTC)
Created April 1, 2025, 17:23 (UTC)
accessLevel public
bureauCode {026:00}
catalog_conformsTo https://project-open-data.cio.gov/v1.1/schema
harvest_object_id 570176a3-b7ac-422e-b20a-386405066771
harvest_source_id b99e41c6-fe79-4c19-bbc3-9b6c8111bfac
harvest_source_title Science Discovery Engine
identifier 10.5067/TERRA/MISR/MIL2ASLS_L2.003
license https://www.usa.gov/government-works
modified 2026-03-30T22:16:01Z
programCode {026:000}
publisher NASA/LARC/SD/ASDC;NASA/JPL/MISR
resource-type Dataset
source_datajson_identifier true
source_hash dcf737575cb7c07d8018ad5512e55cbb14498199b50c130070a7ff3854d85ee6
source_schema_version 1.1
spatial [[{"WestBoundingCoordinate":-180,"NorthBoundingCoordinate":90,"EastBoundingCoordinate":180,"SouthBoundingCoordinate":-90}],"CARTESIAN"]
temporal 2000-03-01/2026-03-30
theme {"Earth Science"}