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Seasat-A satellite scatterometer instrument evaluation
85
Citations
8
References
1980
Year
EngineeringMeasurementSass HardwareEducationPrecision NavigationSeasat-a Satellite ScatterometerInterrupted Cw ModeSatellite MeasurementCalibrationInstrumentationSatellite ImagingGeodesyOcean InstrumentationSynthetic Aperture RadarSatellite Signal ProcessingAstrodynamicsMicrowave Remote SensingRadiation MeasurementRadar ApplicationSatellite Navigation SystemsRadarOcean EngineeringAerospace EngineeringRadar ScatteringRemote SensingSatellite Meteorology
The Seasat-A satellite scatterometer (SASS) was designed to measure ocean surface wind speed and direction in twenty-four (24) independent cells over a 1000-km swath. It operated in the interrupted CW mode at a frequency of 14.6 GHz with four (4) fan beam antennas and used Doppler filtering in the receiver for resolving the cells on the surface. The instrument began operating in space on July 6, 1978, and gathered normalized radar cross section ( <tex xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">\sigma^{0}</tex> ) data for approximately 2290 h. The purpose of this paper is to describe the in-orbit evaluation of the SASS hardware and its compatibility with the spacecraft. It has been determined that the scatterometer operated flawlessly throughout the mission, met all design requirements, and established a good data base for geophysical processing.
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