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Engineers use test sites around the world to make sure Landsat imagery is consistent and accurate. These calibration test sites are regions on the Earth that remain stable over long periods of time. They do not change year to year or season to season. They are typically deserts or dry lakebeds with very low humidity, low atmospheric changes, and little to no human intervention.

These sites are described as pseudo-invariant. They are not completely invariant because no site can be perfectly stable over time and varies to some degree. So engineers refer to the sites as Pseudo-Invariant Calibration Sites, or PICS.

The idea of studying these test sites is simple. Engineers look at a spot of land that is expected to remain consistent. The reflectance at different wavelengths of light in the Landsat data should stay stable. When changes occur in these reflectance values, it may mean the sensor’s response has shifted.

Examples of other test sites are the remote desert sands of Libya, the Railroad Valley Playa lakebed in Nevada, and even the straight bridge that crosses Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana. (The span of the bridge happens to be nearly aligned with the Landsat ground track.)

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June 20, 2019, Landsat 8 (path/row 181/40) — calibration test site in Libya
July 10, 2019, Landsat 8 (path/row 40/33) — calibration test site at Railroad Valley Playa, Nevada
Aug. 29, 2019, Landsat 8 (path/row 22/39) — causeway over Lake Pontchartrain, Louisiana

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