Publication | Open Access
The Aquarius Ocean Salinity Mission High Stability L-band Radiometer
25
Citations
2
References
2006
Year
Unknown Venue
Ocean InstrumentationGeophysicsOcean MonitoringEngineeringDicke RadiometerOcean TechnologyCalibrationRadiometer SequenceMicrowave Remote SensingRemote SensingOceanographic ResearchSatellite MeteorologyOceanographyInstrumentationRadiometer ElectronicsEarth Science
The NASA Earth Science System Pathfinder (ESSP) mission Aquarius, will measure global ocean surface salinity with ~120 km spatial resolution every 7-days with an average monthly salinity accuracy of 0.2 psu (parts per thousand) [1]. This requires an L-band low-noise radiometer with the long-term calibration stability of les0.15 K over 7 days. The instrument utilizes a push-broom configuration which makes it impractical to use a traditional warm load and cold plate in front of the feedhorns. Therefore, to achieve the necessary performance Aquarius utilizes a Dicke radiometer with noise injection to perform a warm - hot calibration. The radiometer sequence between antenna, Dicke load, and noise diode has been optimized to maximize antenna observations and therefore minimize NEDT. This is possible due the ability to thermally control the radiometer electronics and front-end components to 0.1degCrms over 7 days.
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