The SIMBIOS program was conceived in 1994 as a result of a NASA management review of the agency's strategy for monitoring the bio-optical properties of the global ocean through ocean color remote sensing from space. At the time, the NASA ocean color flight manifest included two data buy missions, SeaWiFS and EOS Color, and two sensors, MODIS and Multi-Angle Imaging SpectroRadiometer (MISR), which flew aboard the Terra (formerly known as EOS AM) and Aqua (formerly known as EOS PM) satellites.
The principal question of the review was whether NASA should invest in the Earth Observing System (EOS) Color mission when five additional ocean color systems with similar global capabilities (OCTS, Japan; Global Line Imager (GLI), Japan; Polarization and Directionality of the Earth's Reflectances (POLDER)-1 and -2, France; and Envisat MEdium Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MERIS), European Space Agency) and several other non-global missions by Argentina, Germany, Taiwan, India, Korea, the U.S. Navy, and the People’s Republic of China, were planned for launch during the late 1990s. The review led to a decision that the international assemblage of ten ocean color satellite systems provided ample redundancy to assure continuous global coverage, with no need for an additional NASA-funded instrument and satellite. At the same time, it was noted that non-trivial technical difficulties attended the challenge (and opportunity) of combining ocean color data from this array of independent satellite systems to form consistent and accurate global bio-optical time series products.
For these reasons, it was decided to redirect some of the resources budgeted for EOS Color into an intercalibration and validation program. The decision resulted in international organizational meeting in February 1995, to draft an initial plan, the release of a NASA Research Announcement (NRA) in 1996, and the establishment of the SIMBIOS Project Office at the NASA Goddard Space Flight Center in 1997 (collocated with the SeaWiFS Project Office). The initial SIMBIOS program was scoped for five years (1997-2001) and includes support for the science team (NRA selections) and the project office. In 1995, the International Ocean Colour-Coordinating Group (IOCCG) was formed to undertake the organization of an international SIMBIOS program. The IOCCG presently operates under the auspices of the Scientific Committee on Oceanic Research (SCOR) and chairmanship of Dr. Trevor Platt.
Radiometric comparison experiments conducted by the SeaWiFS Project, with participation of the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST), clearly demonstrated that significant effort would be necessary to quantify the traceability of calibrations of several sensors to a common scale of spectral radiance. Moreover, a coordinated radiometric validation effort would be needed to detect and quantify changes in radiometric responsivity of each sensor during its operational lifetime on orbit. Plans to combine estimates of chlorophyll-a, and other ocean bio-optical products, would require cross-validation of the various algorithms being used operationally by the different flight projects. Also, research must be initiated to develop appropriate methods for combining radiometric and derived bio-optical products from sensors with different viewing geometries, resolutions (spatial, temporal, and spectral), and other radiometric characteristics. Many of these issues were addressed by each ocean color instrument team as they applied to their particular mission, but the teams were not chartered or funded to examine data from other missions. The SIMBIOS program was meant to foster information exchange and collaboration between missions and to complement and assist in the validation efforts of the individual ocean color projects.
Reference: Adapted from content published in Backscatter, May 1998