DocumentCode
1050869
Title
The
scattering coefficient
° algorithm
Author
Bracalente, Emedio M. ; Boggs, Dale H. ; Grantham, William L. ; Sweet, Jon L.
Author_Institution
NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA
Volume
5
Issue
2
fYear
1980
fDate
4/1/1980 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage
145
Lastpage
154
Abstract
This paper describes the algorithms used to convert engineering unit data obtained from the Seasat-A satellite scatterometer (SASS) to radar scattering coefficients (
) and associated supporting parameters. A description is given of the instrument receiver and related processing used by the scatterometer to measure signal power backscattered from the earth\´s surface. The applicable radar equation used for determining
is derived. Sample results of SASS data processed through current algorithm development facility (ADF)
algorithms are presented which include
values for both water and land surfaces,
signatures for these two surface types are seen to have distinctly different characteristics. As expected,
values for water show strong dependence on both incidence angle and wind speed. For land,
values are relatively independent of incidence angle above
and have values in the range
dB.
measurements of the Amazon rain forest indicate the usefulness of this type of data as a stable calibration reference target. Using this Amazon data, relative biases between all four antennas and both polarizations are shown to be less than 0.4 dB.
) and associated supporting parameters. A description is given of the instrument receiver and related processing used by the scatterometer to measure signal power backscattered from the earth\´s surface. The applicable radar equation used for determining
is derived. Sample results of SASS data processed through current algorithm development facility (ADF)
algorithms are presented which include
values for both water and land surfaces,
signatures for these two surface types are seen to have distinctly different characteristics. As expected,
values for water show strong dependence on both incidence angle and wind speed. For land,
values are relatively independent of incidence angle above
and have values in the range
dB.
measurements of the Amazon rain forest indicate the usefulness of this type of data as a stable calibration reference target. Using this Amazon data, relative biases between all four antennas and both polarizations are shown to be less than 0.4 dB.Keywords
Sea surface electromagnetic scattering; Data engineering; Image converters; Instruments; Land surface; Power engineering and energy; Power measurement; Radar measurements; Radar scattering; Satellites; Signal processing;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Oceanic Engineering, IEEE Journal of
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0364-9059
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/JOE.1980.1145453
Filename
1145453
Link To Document