DocumentCode :
14744
Title :
Comparison of Model Predictions With Measurements of Ku- and Ka-Band Near-Nadir Normalized Radar Cross Sections of the Sea Surface From the Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes Experiment
Author :
Majurec, Ninoslav ; Johnson, Joel T. ; Tanelli, Simone ; Durden, Stephen L.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng. & Comput., Ohio State Univ., Columbus, OH, USA
Volume :
52
Issue :
9
fYear :
2014
fDate :
Sept. 2014
Firstpage :
5320
Lastpage :
5332
Abstract :
A comparison of model predictions with measurements of near-nadir normalized radar cross sections (NRCSs) of the sea surface at Ku- and Ka-bands is reported. Measurements of Airborne Precipitation Radar Second Generation (APR-2) from near nadir to 25 ° incidence angle, along with simultaneous wind truth from dropsonde observations, are compared with predictions of the “cutoff-invariant” two-scale model of sea scattering with the overall goal of assessing the model for possible future use in the APR-2 calibration process. The performance of the model as a function of wind speed and incidence angle is therefore emphasized. The measured data set, acquired primarily during the 2010 “Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes” (GRIP) experiment, includes wind speeds from approximately 5 to 45 m/s. Model comparisons are limited by uncertainties in the wind fields due to limited dropsonde coverage; the data set is separated into “more reliable” (containing wind speeds of 5-20 m/s) and “less reliable” (wind speeds of 5-45 m/s) wind truth categories accordingly. Because a model of the sea spectrum is required for cutoff-invariant model predictions, comparisons with measured data are performed for three differing sea spectrum descriptions. It is found that a bias of less than ~ 1 dB over the wind speed range 5-40 m/s and a standard deviation less than 1 dB over the wind speed range 10-40 m/s can be achieved when using the “unified” sea spectrum description of Elfouhaily The model also provides error levels that are near uniform with respect to both incidence angle and wind speed.
Keywords :
oceanographic techniques; remote sensing by radar; underwater optics; wind; APR-2 calibration process; Airborne Precipitation Radar Second Generation; GRIP experiment; Genesis and Rapid Intensification Processes experiment; Ka-band near nadir NRCS; Ku-band near nadir NRCS; cutoff invariant model predictions; cutoff invariant two scale model; dropsonde observations; incidence angle; normalized radar cross sections; radar cross sections measurements; sea scattering; sea spectrum description; sea spectrum model; sea surface NRCS; simultaneous wind truth; velocity 5 m/s to 45 m/s; wind speed; wind truth categories; Optical surface waves; Predictive models; Radar; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Surface waves; Wind speed; Airborne radar; doppler radar; meteorological radar; radar cross-sections; radar remote sensing; sea surface;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0196-2892
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2013.2288105
Filename :
6679213
Link To Document :
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