The 50-year Landsat collection 2 archive

Christopher J. Crawford(United States Geological Survey), David P. Roy(Michigan State University), Saeed Arab, Christopher Barnes, Éric Vermote(Goddard Space Flight Center), Glynn Hulley(Jet Propulsion Laboratory), Aaron Gerace(Rochester Institute of Technology), Mike Choate(United States Geological Survey), Christopher Engebretson(United States Geological Survey), Esad Micijevic(United States Geological Survey), Gail Schmidt, Cody Anderson(United States Geological Survey), Martha C. Anderson(Agricultural Research Service), Michelle Bouchard(United States Geological Survey), Bruce D. Cook(Goddard Space Flight Center), Ray Dittmeier, Daniel M. Howard, Calli B. Jenkerson, Minsu Kim, Tania Kleyians(Rochester Institute of Technology), T. Maiersperger(United States Geological Survey), Chase Mueller, C. S. R. Neigh(United States Geological Survey), Linda R. Owen, Benjamin P. Page, Nima Pahlevan(Goddard Space Flight Center), Rajagopalan Rengarajan, Jean‐Claude Roger(Goddard Space Flight Center), Kristi L. Sayler(United States Geological Survey), Pat Scaramuzza, Sergii Skakun(University of Maryland, College Park), Lin Yan(United States Geological Survey), Hankui K. Zhang(South Dakota State University), Zhe Zhu(University of Connecticut), Steve Zahn(United States Geological Survey)
Science of Remote Sensing
September 18, 2023
Cited by 236Open Access
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Abstract

The Landsat global consolidated data archive now exceeds 50 years. In recognition of the need for consistently processed data across the Landsat satellite series, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) initiated collection-based processing of the entire archive that was processed as Collection 1 in 2016. In preparation for the data from the now successfully launched Landsat 9, the USGS reprocessed the Landsat archive as Collection 2 in 2020. This paper describes the rationale for, and the contents and advancements provided by Collection 2, and highlights the differences between the Collection 1 and Collection 2 products. Notably, the Collection 2 products have improved geolocation and, for the first time, the USGS provides a global inventory of Level 2 surface reflectance and surface temperature products. Also for the first time, the USGS used a commercial cloud computing architecture via Amazon Web Services (AWS) to efficiently process the archive and enable direct cloud access of the Landsat products. The paper concludes with discussion of likely improvements expected in Collection 3 in preparation for the Landsat Next mission that is planned for launch in the early 2030s.


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