- Missions
- Landsat-1 to Landsat-3
- Instruments
- Return-Beam Vidicon (RBV)
- Return-Beam Vidicon (RBV) Over...
Return-Beam Vidicon (RBV) Overview
Instrument Design
The Return-Beam Vidicon (RBV) sensor utilised vidicon tube instruments containing an electron gun that read images from a photoconductive faceplate similar to television cameras. The data stream received from the satellite was analog-to-digital preprocessed to correct for radiometric and geometric errors.
The RBV system was redesigned for Landsat-3 to use two cameras, mounted side-by-side, with panchromatic spectral response and higher spatial resolution than on Landsat-1 and Landsat-2, to complement the multispectral coverage provided by the MSS. Each of the cameras produced a swath of about 90 km (for a total swath of 180 km).
- 40-metre-ground resolution
- Three cameras operating in one broad spectral band (green to near-infrared; 0.505–0.750 µm)
- Data recorded to 70 millimetre (mm) black and white film rolls
- Data: 3.5 MHz FM video
RBV data was rarely used and considered useful for engineering evaluation purposes rather than science analysis. Visit RBV Film Only for more information.