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Landsat Levels of Processing

All Landsat Level-1 data products are created using the best available processing level for each scene. The processing level used is determined by the existence of ground control points, elevation data provided by various digital elevation models, and/or payload correction data collected by the spacecraft and sensor. 

Return to Landsat Geometry Overview

 

Processing Levels

Landsat satellite data are processed into Level-1 scenes using the Landsat Product Generation System (LPGS)

Each Landsat scene is processed to one of three possible processing levels — these are described below. Landsat data are also characterized by Collection Tiers, which make up the inventory structure for Landsat Collections Level-1 data. Each scene is placed into the appropriate tier, based on data quality and the level of processing. Visit the Collection 2 Tiers section on the Landsat Collection 2 page to learn more about Landsat Collection tiers.

 

Precision and Terrain Correction (L1TP)

All Landsat scenes are attempted to process to L1TP, using Ground Control Points (GCPs) and a digital elevation model (DEM).  In some cases (and more likely in older Landsat data), scene and/or sensor issues, or insufficient reference data can cause L1TP processing to fail. Scene issues include snow, ice, and clouds, which prevent an accurate registration of GCPs within a scene. Sensor issues include measurement/outliers in the spacecraft or instrument telemetry of an interval which also affect the usability of the GCPs. In these scenarios, a L1GT or a L1GS product will be created instead. Click here to see more details about L1TP.
 

Systematic Terrain Correction (L1GT)

L1GT products are created when the systematic product has consistent and sufficient locational accuracy to permit the application of a terrain model. The Geodetic Accuracy of the systematic imagery location to that of the Digital Elevation Model (DEM) will have an impact on the overall geometric accuracy of the L1GT.  

In 2003, analysis was performed to determine the validity of applying an elevation correction to the Landsat 7 (L7) Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+) systematic imagery.  This work was performed once the mission moved into operations and the accuracy of the systematic products were found to exceed the expected accuracy associated with the design value of the spacecraft and instrument.  Visit the Landsat Terrain Error Sensitivity Study to view the results of this analysis. 

The Geodetic Accuracy of the systematic imagery can be tracked within the mission’s performance results which are reported within Landsat Quarterly Calibration and Validation Reports published by the EROS Cal/Val Center of Excellence (ECCOE).  The relationship between the registration accuracy of the systematic imagery to the DEM and the overall geometric accuracy of the product can be found within these reports.  The typical geodetic accuracy for the Landsat 8 (L8) and Landsat 9 (L9) missions are within a +/-30-meter range. Click here to see more details about L1GT.
 

Systematic Correction (L1GS)

L1GS products are created when the locational accuracy is not sufficient to apply terrain correction, such as: Insufficient number of ground control points, such as small islands or Antarctic; opaque clouds that obscure the ground; or locational errors greater than the search distance for ground control. Click here to see more details about L1GS. 

 

How Geometric Errors affect Landsat Data Quality

When scenes fail to process to L1TP, the loss of the ability to use GCPs affect data from each sensor differently. Details for each sensor are described below. The USGS Cal/Val team continually works to improve the quality of Landsat data. Data improvements will be implemented into future Landsat Collections. Users are encouraged to contact the USGS with scenes that are found to be problematic, as these will be used to help improve overall data quality. 

Landsat 8-9 Operational Land Imager (OLI) / Thermal Infrared Sensor (TIRS)

If a Landsat 8 or Landsat 9 scene fails to generate a L1TP product, the scene is processed to L1GT, without the use of GCPs. Since the pointing accuracy of the Landsat 8 and Landsat 9 spacecrafts are both excellent (about 17-m, circular error (CE)-90), terrain correction helps to account for the higher order/relief induced distortions even when GCPs are not used. So, while Landsat 8 and Landsat 9 OLI/TIRS L1GT products may not be as accurate as L1TP products, they are typically better than 30-meters (m) (one pixel), even without the use of GCPs.

Landsat 7 Enhanced Thematic Mapper Plus (ETM+)

While the Landsat 7 spacecraft pointing-accuracy requirement is 250-m, in most cases, it is 10-m. Although Landsat 7 ETM+ data are not as accurate as Landsat 8, the advantage of correcting the higher-order terrain-induced effects outweighs the inaccuracy introduced due to the small mis-registration error between the DEM and the scene due to its pointing errors. Therefore, Landsat 7 scenes that fail to generate L1TP products are corrected for terrain without the use of GCPs (L1GT).

In some rare cases, due to errors / inconsistencies in the spacecraft and instrument telemetry, scenes can exhibit errors that may introduce a simple shift (on the order of a few hundred meters) to higher order distortions that can affect the entire scene producing inconsistent internal geometry. In this case, the L1GT products could be geometrically inaccurate by several hundred meters. The EROS Cal/Val team is continuing to work in improving the geometric accuracies of these scenes.

Landsat 4-5 Thematic Mapper (TM)

There are no specific pointing accuracy requirements for Landsat 5 (or for Landsat 4). Based on EROS Cal/Val analysis, the pointing accuracy of a Landsat 5 scene can vary anywhere from 0 m to 10 kilometers (km), depending on the time-period within the life of the mission, telemetry-related issues, and the type of telemetry available to estimate the spacecraft position (no payload correction data (PCD) or use of two-line elements (TLE) than spacecraft position information. Most Landsat 5 TM scenes in the archive are expected to be within 1 km, but scenes with offsets between 1 and 3 km are not uncommon. LPGS can estimate the scene’s geometric offsets when their offsets are within 4 km, but scenes with offsets greater than 4 km cannot be registered with the GCPs. These scenes will be processed as L1GS without the use of GCPs or DEM.

Unlike Landsat 8 and Landsat 7, TM scenes are likely to have been acquired with large pointing error (> 500 m). Therefore, applying terrain correction without the use of GCPs will introduce large incorrect relief-adjustments to the scene. Therefore, all TM scenes are processed as L1GS products if GCPs are not used in data correction.

Landsat 1-5 Multispectral Scanner (MSS)

Landsat MSS geodetic accuracy is known to have a much greater offset than Landsat TM data.  The EROS Cal/Val Team is looking to address MSS geometric/geodetic data accuracy in the future.

 

Additional Information on Processing Corrections Accuracy

Users need to be aware that since the accuracy of L1TP, L1GT, and L1GS products vary, stacking scenes with different corrections will introduce misalignment between the images. The magnitude of misalignment between the products is dependent on the sensor, product types, and can vary anywhere from less than one pixel to hundreds of pixels. All L1TP Tier-1 products are expected to be consistent to within 12-m. Although Tier-1 and Tier-2 products are expected to be aligned to within 1 pixel in general, it is not uncommon to observe misalignments more than 1 pixel between Tier-1 and Tier-2 products (for any sensor combinations) or between any Tier-2 products.

Unfortunately, since Landsat data are processed using automated approaches when attempting to produce a L1TP product, it is not possible to provide estimated offsets for L1GT and L1GS products. A scene designated as L1GT or L1GS is because an accurate geometric offset could not be estimated using the GCPs through these automated approaches. These product designations also indicate no information is available on the magnitude of the offsets between the imagery and ground control. This can also be an indication that any cloud-free (snow/ice free) scene that failed to generate a L1TP product is likely to have poor telemetry data. This is especially true for the data from earlier Landsat missions. Scenes with poor telemetry data are highly susceptible to higher-order distortions and cannot be corrected to match the requirements of an orthorectified product even when approximate offsets are known.

 

How Users can Best Utilize Scenes of Different Corrections

Graphic displaying pixel levels of geometric distortion in a sample Landsat scene
In Pixel units (geometric error in the scene with respect to an orthorectified image)0 <= Green < 0.50.5 <= Cyan < 11 <= Green < 22 <= Green < 3 Red >= 3

Geometric registration of the data with further processing is dependent on the whether the scene can be corrected using a simple set of biases as offsets. In some cases, as mentioned earlier, incorrect measurements / outliers in the instrument or spacecraft telemetry can potentially introduce higher-order distortions in the L1GS products that cannot be corrected by offsets or using a linear model. Secondly, terrain-induced effects cannot be corrected without the use of DEM.

The image to the right is an example of the higher-order distortion that can be observed in a L1TP product that was originally processed as a L1GS product. This is an example of a scene that has bad telemetry data, resulting in not only large geodetic offset, but also an inconsistency in the internal geometry of the scene that cannot be corrected using a simple polynomial or affine transformation. The L1GS product’s geometric offset was measured by comparing against a L1TP product. The measured offsets (>10 km), determined manually, were then used within the Image Assessment System (IAS) to produce a L1TP product. Several software packages and most GIS systems will allow a user to pick control manually and apply a given spatial transformation to an image file.

The color-coded graphics observed in the figure shows the higher order distortions present in the image even when it is corrected for the large geodetic offsets within the scene.

 

Precision and Terrain Correction (Level-1TP, L1TP)

Precision and Terrain Correction provides radiometric and geodetic accuracy by incorporating ground control points while employing a Digital Elevation Model (DEM) for topographic displacement. Geodetic accuracy of the product depends on the image quality and the accuracy, number, and distribution of the ground control points (GCP):

  • Ground control points used for Landsat Collection 2 L1TP correction are based on re-baselined Landsat 8 OLI Ground Control Points (GCPs) to the European Space Agency Copernicus Sentinel-2 Global Reference Image (GRI).
    • The January 2020 GCP section on the Landsat GCP Update page provides details about using GRI.
  • The elevation data used for relief displacement of Landsat Collection 2 L1TP data include:
  • Precision fit and verification RMSE estimates are only available for L1TP products. The precision fit estimate (RMSE_Model) quantifies how well the control points used in the precision registration match the reference GCP database. The verification estimate (RMSE_Verify) of MSS and TM data quantifies how well the image matches an independent set of GCPs in the reference GCP database.
  • The specification for L1TP product acceptance varies by sensor. The specification is rigid for Landsat 8-9 OLI/TIRS, Landsat 7 ETM+, and Landsat 4-5 TM data, many of which have excellent internal geometry. Given the poor internal geometry of the Multispectral Sensor (MSS) aboard Landsat 1-5, the use of ground control even for data with large RMSE was considered preferable, to creating a large proportion of data as L1GS with the internal geometry uncorrected. 
  • The information provided in the metadata file can be used to evaluate the geodetic accuracy of the L1TP data product.

Systematic Terrain Correction (Level-1GT, L1GT)

Systematic Terrain Correction provides systematic, radiometric, and geometric accuracy, while employing a Digital Elevation Model (DEM) to correct for relief displacement:

  • Landsat 7 scenes without sufficient control to produce L1TP images are processed to an L1GT.
  • Landsat 8-9 scenes without sufficient ground control points to produce L1TP products are processed as L1GT. The accuracy of the L1GT systematic product approaches that of an L1TP product. Registration to the shared Ground Control Point reference data set improves the co-registration to the other Landsat sensors. For scenes where the reference database error exceeds 30 m the L1GT images will have better absolute accuracy than Landsat 8-9 L1TP data, but may not be co-registered to within 30 m.
  • Landsat 7-9 data over Antarctica are processed to an L1GT since it has not been possible to generate ground control in Antarctica suitable for the generation of an L1TP product.

Systematic Correction provides systematic radiometric and geometric corrections, which are derived from data collected by the sensor and spacecraft.

  • Landsat scenes processed as L1GS do not have sufficient geodetic accuracy to include in image-to-image analysis without further image-specific evaluation and registration.
  • Landsat ETM+ geometric accuracy of the systematically corrected product should be within 125 m, 90 percent of the time for low-relief areas at sea level based on pre-fit estimates.  Error increases as distance and elevation increase from low relief areas.
  • Landsat TM geometric accuracy for L1GS products should be within 700 m, 90 percent of the time for low-relief areas at sea level based on pre-fit estimates.
  • Landsat MSS geometric accuracy for L1GS products is substantially worse than later sensors. Both the internal geometry and locational accuracy will require manual registration of the images
  • Landsat TM and MSS images may be offset from its correct spatial location by thousands of meters, preventing the use of terrain correction for systematic products.

 

Landsat Collection 2 Level-1 Product Registration Success

The success rate for creating L1TP products varies by sensor, but also by cloud cover. The tables below displays the processing level by cloud cover range percentage for the Landsat 1-9 satellites. These values were generated from the most recent Landsat Product Generation System (LPGS) software version.

In the Landsat 8-9 tables, all path/rows are separated into two groups; path/rows that have produced at least one L1TP scene, and path/rows that have never produced an L1TP scene. Precision and terrain correction is attempted on all Landsat 8-9 scenes. If precision correction fails from the path/row group that has produced at least one L1TP, the scene becomes an L1GT FB (fallback). If precision correction fails from a path/row that has never produced an L1TP (which is likely), then the scene will become an L1GT (no fallback).

For the Landsat 1-7 tables, all path/row combinations are separated internally into two groups: path/rows that will undergo precision and terrain correction, and path/rows that will not be precision and terrain corrected. If precision and terrain correction is attempted and successful, the scene becomes an L1TP. If precision correction is unsuccessful, the scene becomes an L1GT FB (fallback). If precision and terrain correction is not applied, the scene will become an L1GS (or L1GT).

 

Landsat Collection 2 Level-1 Product Registration Success Percentage by Cloud Cover

As of January 9, 2023


 

Landsat 9 OLI /TIRS 

Cloud Cover →

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L1TP
T1
73.5 74.8 75.5 75.7 74.7 72.0 69.5 66.2 58.3 20.5 0.7 60.4
L1TP
T2
3.5 3.6 3.8 3.5 3.8 4.0 4.2 3.9 3.7 3.3 0.7 3.5
L1GT
FB
2.5 4.0 4.5 5.5 6.9 9.1 11.0 14.9 23.0 51.2 0.0 15.2
L1GT
T2
20.6 17.5 16.2 15.2 14.7 14.9 15.3 15.0 15.1 25.0 98.6 20.9

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 8 OLI/TIRS 

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ALL

L1TP
T1
77.0 76.8 77.7 77.4 76.5 74.8 72.8 70.0 62.5 23.0 1.2 63.9
L1TP
T2
3.6 3.7 3.6 3.6 3.7 3.7 3.6 3.3 3.2 2.8 0.5 3.4
L1GT
FB
2.3 3.8 4.4 5.4 6.6 8.3 10.4 13.7 21.5 52.7 0.0 14.9
L1GT
T2
17.2 15.7 14.3 13.6 13.2 13.3 13.2 13.0 12.8 21.5 98.3 17.9

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 7 ETM+

Cloud Cover →

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ALL

L1TP
T1
83.9 93.8 93.6 93.3 92.5 91.6 89.6 86.2 77.0 30.7 0.1 77.6
L1TP
T2
0.9 1.0 1.1 1.1 1.3 1.5 1.9 2.6 3.6 3.4 0.0 1.6
L1GT
FB
2.5 2.4 2.7 3.1 3.8 4.6 6.2 9.1 17.4 62.6 0.0 13.0
L1GS
FB
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0
L1GT
T2
0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.2 0.0
L1GS
T2
12.6 2.8 2.6 2.4 2.3 2.3 2.2 2.1 2.0 3.4 99.7 7.8

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 5 TM

Cloud Cover →

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ALL

L1TP
T1
66.1 85.1 84.5 83.4 82.6 81.2 78.8 74.7 66.2 25.6 0.6 65.8
L1TP
T2
2.1 3.1 3.1 3.4 3.7 4.0 4.4 5.0 5.7 3.8 0.0 3.2
L1GS
FB
6.8 10.8 11.4 12.2 12.8 14.0 16.0 19.5 27.4 67.6 0.0 19.7
L1GS
T2
25.0 1.1 1.0 1.0 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.8 0.7 3.0 99.4 11.4

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 4 TM

Cloud Cover →

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L1TP
T1
61.8 82.8 80.3 79.1 78.1 75.0 73.9 70.2 58.7 20.6 0.5 58.7
L1TP
T2
1.4 2.1 2.6 2.9 2.9 3.8 4.0 4.3 5.7 3.3 0.2 2.6
L1GS
FB
4.4 6.3 7.9 8.3 10.0 12.3 12.9 15.2 25.9 61.1 0.0 17.9
L1GS
T2
32.5 8.9 9.2 9.6 9.0 8.9 9.2 10.3 9.7 15.1 99.3 20.7

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 5 MSS

Cloud Cover →

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L1TP
T1
0.6 0.9 0.8 0.7 0.7 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.5
L1TP
T2
56.6 72.6 66.1 58.6 50.2 42.0 33.0 25.6 20.3 12.1 6.8 45.6
L1GS
FB
12.9 24.8 31.2 38.6 46.9 55.3 64.3 71.7 76.8 81.2 51.9 39.5
L1GS
T2
29.9 1.7 1.8 2.1 2.3 2.2 2.3 2.4 2.8 6.7 41.3 14.5

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 4 MSS

Cloud Cover →

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L1TP
T1
0.4 0.4 0.3 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.3
L1TP
T2
52.6 65.5 57.4 49.8 42.7 35.3 28.9 22.9 17.8 10.4 8.6 45.0
L1GS
FB
13.2 32.8 41.1 49.1 56.0 63.5 70.0 76.1 81.0 86.4 70.1 39.3
L1GS
T2
33.8 1.4 1.3 1.0 1.0 1.0 1.0 0.9 1.1 3.2 21.2 15.5

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 3 MSS

Cloud Cover →

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L1TP
T1
0.2 0.2 0.2 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.2 0.1 0.1 0.0 0.1
L1TP
T2
56.5 73.7 73.2 74.4 53.7 44.9 35.6 26.5 22.2 11.6 0.1 47.2
L1GS
FB
9.5 24.1 25.7 24.8 44.8 54.0 63.0 72.0 75.7 83.9 4.6 39.6
L1GS
T2
33.9 2.0 1.0 0.7 1.4 1.0 1.4 1.3 2.0 4.4 95.3 13.1

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 2 MSS

Cloud Cover →

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L1TP
T1
0.9 1.4 1.4 1.7 1.4 1.1 1.0 0.9 0.5 0.2 0.0 0.9
L1TP
T2
63.1 75.3 70.1 62.9 54.6 45.6 38.7 31.0 24.9 15.7 2.6 51.3
L1GS
FB
9.5 22.3 27.8 34.7 43.2 52.2 59.1 66.5 72.9 80.8 23.9 35.7
L1GS
T2
26.6 0.9 0.8 0.8 0.8 1.1 1.2 1.5 1.7 3.3 73.6 12.2

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse

 

Landsat 1 MSS

Cloud Cover →

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L1TP
T1
2.0 2.4 2.7 2.3 2.0 1.5 1.3 0.9 0.6 0.2 0.0 1.7
L1TP
T2
44.6 53.8 47.6 43.3 38.7 34.1 30.7 26.8 22.3 14.7 0.8 38.7
L1GS
FB
19.7 39.3 44.6 49.7 55.0 59.8 63.2 66.7 71.1 74.2 19.9 41.0
L1GS
T2
33.8 4.5 5.1 4.8 4.3 4.6 4.8 5.6 5.9 10.8 79.3 18.7

L1TP = Level-1 Terrain Precision; L1GT = Level-1 Systematic Terrain Correction; L1GS = Level-1 Systematic Correction
T1 = Tier 1; T2 = Tier 2; FB = Full Resolution Browse