Why Landsat ETM+ panchromatic band' wavelength steps over visible range?

A major reason for having panchromatic bands covering a broad spectral range is a technical reason: most of the solar energy reflected by the Earth is in the NIR wavelength. As the aim of a single panchromatic band is to achieve a better spatial resolution, you can improve the signal-to-noise ratio if your total amount of energy is larger. Originally, panchromatic bands used as much light as they could (etymology PAN-chromatic mean ALL colours) in order to offer a high spatial resolution with the best possible SNR (if you divide the pixel spatial resolution by 2, you have four times less light per pixel). Most satellites therefore use a broad spectral range for their panchromatic band.

With the improved sensor technology of more recent satellites, there are now less constraints on the SNR, giving more flexibility from the technical point of view. Then, as Andre Silva mentioned, you have the possibility to optimize your "panchromatic" range for a given application (which becomes a "thematic" justification and no more a "technical" reason). EDIT: It is worth noting that the visible and NIR light detectors of OLI are Silicon PIN photodiode (sensitivity between 250 a 1100 nm) on top of which light filters are applied. The choice of spectral range in VNIR is thus mainly driven by imaging needs and SNR constraints (not by the availability of detectors in a given range). In other words, a low SNR is a compromise between the spectral precision and the spatial precision. If you look at the NIR, for example, you have more incoming energy, therefore you can use a smaller range than with the visible spectral bands, with the same spatial resolution.


A brief explanation can be found in the pdf file 'Landsat 8 (L8) Data Users Handbook', available from landsat.usgs.gov.

On page 9, first paragraph, it is said:

The OLI panchromatic band, Band 8, is also narrower relative to the ETM+ panchromatic band to create greater contrast between vegetated areas and land without vegetation cover.

This would be in line with your impression that the panchromatic band from Landsat 8 OLI is more handy in visual interpretation as well as suitable for pan-sharpening and image classification.

One advantage of having the panchromatic band from Landsat 7 extending to near infrared (NIR) is covered in the duplicate question Why does Landsat 8 panchromatic band NOT include the infrared?, which is it collects more data.

The following is a quote from the Ian Brown's blog 'How not to plan a mission (part 2: the sensors)'

Band 8, the panchromatic band, is significantly narrower on the OLI compared with ETM+. This means no pansharpening of the NIR band! This is apparently to “The OLI panchromatic band, band 8, is also narrower relative to the ETM + panchromatic band to create greater contrast between vegetated areas and surfaces without vegetation in panchromatic images”. However, this goal can be achieved through pansharpening of the NIR and the use of vegetation indexes, so I fail to see the logic of a narrow pan band. Surely for Land cover/Land use studies a higher resolution NIR band is better than higher contrast in panchromatic imagery? ... .


References:

+ United States Geological Survey (USGS). Landsat 8 (L8) Data Users Handbook. Version 2 (106 pages). March, 2016. Accessed in 7th, January, 2018. Available at: https://landsat.usgs.gov/landsat-8-l8-data-users-handbook.

+ Brown, Ian. How not to plan a mission (part 2: the sensors). Digital Geography. November, 2013. Accessed in 7th, January, 2018. Available at: http://www.digital-geography.com/landsat-8-how-not-to-plan-a-mission-part-2-the-sensors/.