Title :
A spaceborne L-band radiometer-radar concept for land and ocean surface monitoring
Author :
Njoku, Eni ; Yunjin Kim ; Spencer, Matt ; Rahmat-Samii, Yahya ; Thomson, M.W.
Author_Institution :
Jet Propulsion Lab., California Inst. of Technol., Pasadena, CA
Abstract :
An L-band radiometer-radar concept has been studied for spaceborne remote sensing of land surface soil moisture, freeze-thaw state, and ocean surface salinity. The integrated design provides simultaneous passive and active measurements with potential for enhanced geophysical retrieval accuracy and spatial resolution. The design takes advantage of cost savings achievable using shared subsystems and hardware. The baseline system concept has been evaluated to determine the feasibility of the technical approach and as a point of departure for system trade-offs. The unique features of this concept are the integration of the radiometer and radar sensors, the use of a deployable-mesh conically scanned reflector antenna, and the use of unfocused synthetic aperture radar (SAR) processing. Taken together, these features represent a significant departure from conventional radiometer, scatterometer, and SAR approaches. The conical wide-swath scan is a desirable feature that provides constant incidence angle and antenna pattern characteristics across the swath, simplified data processing (passive and active), and frequent global sampling. The concept is targeted for a low-cost, short-development-cycle mission, suitable for NASA´s Earth System Science Pathfinder (ESSP) series
Keywords :
atmospheric boundary layer; atmospheric measuring apparatus; microwave measurement; radiometers; reflector antennas; remote sensing by radar; synthetic aperture radar; Earth System Science Pathfinder; NASA; active sensing; antenna; antenna pattern characteristics; conical wide-swath scan; conically scanned reflector antenna; constant incidence angle; feasibility; feedhorn; geophysical retrieval; global sampling; integrated design; land surface monitoring; ocean surface monitoring; passive sensing; remote sensing; spaceborne L-band radiometer-radar; spatial resolution; unfocused synthetic aperture radar processing; L-band; Land surface; Moisture; Oceans; Radar antennas; Radiometry; Remote sensing; Spaceborne radar; Surface soil; Synthetic aperture radar;
Conference_Titel :
Aerospace Conference, 2001, IEEE Proceedings.
Conference_Location :
Big Sky, MT
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-6599-2
DOI :
10.1109/AERO.2001.931502