13 research outputs found

    Denormalization of visibilities for in-orbit calibration of interferometric radiometers

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    This paper reviews the relative calibration of an interferometric radiometer taking into account the experimental results of the first batch of receivers developed in the frame of the European Space Agency's Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity mission. Measurements show state-of-the-art baseline performance as long as the system is capable of correcting the effect of orbital temperature swing. A method to validate internal calibration during in-orbit deep-sky views and to correct linearity errors is also presented.Peer Reviewe

    Denormalization of visibilities for in-orbit calibration of interferometric radiometers

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    This paper reviews the relative calibration of an interferometric radiometer taking into account the experimental results of the first batch of receivers developed in the frame of the European Space Agency's Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity mission. Measurements show state-of-the-art baseline performance as long as the system is capable of correcting the effect of orbital temperature swing. A method to validate internal calibration during in-orbit deep-sky views and to correct linearity errors is also presented.Peer Reviewe

    Contribution to advanced sensor development for passive imaging of the Earth

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    This work has been formally undertaken within the frame of the scholarship number BES-2012-053917 of 1 December 2012, by the "Secretario de Estado de Investigación del Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad" related to the program "Formación de Personal Investigador (FPI)". The scholarship is related to the research project at the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC) number TEC2011-25865. In a more general scope, this thesis is related to the Remote Sensing Laboratory (Signal Theory & Communication Department, UPC) on-going activities, within the SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) mission by the European Space Agency (ESA). These activities have been organized to provide original advances in the following four main topics: 1) SMOS calibration and performance. Since the launch of the instrument in 2009, SMOS imaging has been performing exclusively in co-polar mode. However, SMOS measurements are fully polarimetric. This feature was not operationally exploited due to the large errors yielded by full-pol images. In this context my work was addressed to support better characterization of the antenna. Based on the idea that SMOS polarization mode was recently implemented using Full-pol measurements, the so-called relative phases have been recomputed by using co-polar and cross-polar measurements. SMOS moderate Side Lobe Level (SLL) is caused by the limited coverage of the measured visibility samples in the frequency domain, so another objective of this work has been devoted to assess the impact of calibration errors into SMOS side lobes level (SLL). The main objective on this topic has been to reproduce by simulation SMOS measured side-lobe levels (SLL) by adding errors to a point source response, in order to identify the dominant source of error. During commissioning phase it was detected that SMOS heater system were introducing small and random sporadic PMS offset steps (jumps) in several units. Another work during this thesis has been devoted to mitigate those PMS jumps by trimming calibration date from single LICEF averaged TA jumps over the ocean. 2) SMOS spatial bias assessment. SMOS measurements still have mathematical image reconstruction errors that must be properly assessed. The aim of this work is to focus on the so-called "floor error", defined in an error free end-to-end image reconstruction simulation. In order to reduce this error, different inversion approaches have been implemented and tested, as the so-called Gibbs 2 approach 3) SMOS improved imaging. One of the problems of most concern within the SMOS mission is related to the so-called "land-sea contamination" (LSC), an artificial increase of ocean brightness temperature close to land masses. Therefore, a systematic assessment has been performed in this thesis in order to understand and mitigate this artifact. This subject is related to one of the main original outcomes of the thesis, since it has a relevant impact on the quality of SMOS imaging. The LSC mitigation technique developed during the work of the thesis has been presented and validated by different methods. 4) SMOS follow-on missions advanced configurations. This work is devoted to assess the impact of instrumental errors on the radiometric accuracy (pixel bias) of one of the selected array configurations of the so-called Super-MIRAS instrument. The aim of this work has been focused on the assessment of different array geometries and instrument architectures of future L-band synthetic aperture radiometers to improve spatial resolution while maintaining radiometric sensitivity.Esta tesis se ha llevado a cabo en el marco de la beca FPI BES-2012-053917 del 1 de diciembre de 2012, por el "Secretario de Estado de Investigación del Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad", asociada al proyecto TEC2011-25865 (Universidad Politècnica de Catalunya). En un sentido más amplio, el trabajo se engloba dentro de las actividades del Grupo de Teledetección (RSLab) del Departamento de Teoría de la Señal y Comunicaciones, UPC, en el marco de la misión SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) de la Agencia Espacial Europea del Espacio (ESA). El trabajo se divide en: 1) Calibración y prestaciones del sensor SMOS Desde el lanzamiento del instrumento en 2009, la imagen de SMOS se ha obtenido utilizando medidas en modo co-polar. Sin embargo, las medidas en SMOS se realizan en full-pol. Esto no se había llevado a cabo debido a los grandes errores que se obtenían con imágenes en full-pol. En este contexto mi trabajo se ha enfocado en la realización de una mejor caracterización de la antena. Basado en la idea de que el modo full-pol ha sido recientemente implementado en SMOS, las fases relativas entre antenas han sido recalculadas utilizando medidas co-polares y cross-polares. Los lóbulos secundarios de SMOS (SLL) son causados por la cobertura limitada de las visibilidades medidas en el dominio frecuencial, así que otro de los objetivos de este trabajo ha sido analizar el impacto de errores de calibración en los lóbulos secundarios de SMOS. Básicamente se han reproducido los lóbulos secundarios de SMOS mediantes simulaciones añadiendo errores a una fuente puntual, identificando las principales fuentes de error. Durante la fase de comisionado se detectó que el sistema de calentamiento de SMOS introducía pequeños saltos aleatorios del offset del PMS en diferentes unidades. Para hacer un seguimiento y corregir estos saltos se realizaron calibraciones de offset semanales justo después de la fase de comisionado, así que otro de los trabajos realizados en esta tesis ha sido dirigido a mitigar estos saltos introduciendo calibraciones adicionales antes de los mismos a partir de medir la temperatura de antena media calculada en el océano. 2) Técnicas de reducción de los errores espaciales SMOS tiene un error matemático de reconstrucción en la imagen que ha sido investigado en este trabajo. Así que este trabajo se ha focalizado en el "floor error" definido como el error de reconstrucción en un instrumento ideal libre de errores. Para reducir este error se han utilizado diferentes aproximaciones como Gibbs 2. 3) Mejoras en la inversión de imagen Uno de los mayores problemas durante los primeros cinco años de misión SMOS ha sido la llamada "land-sea contamination" (contaminación tierra-mar). Así pues, se ha realizado un estudio sistemático para comprender y mitigar este artefacto. Este tema está relacionado con uno de los descubrimientos más importantes de esta tesis ya que este tiene un gran impacto en la calidad de la imagen de SMOS. La técnica encontrada para mitigar este error es presentada y validada mediante diferentes métodos. 4) Misiones futuras Este trabajo está enfocado en la investigación del impacto de errores instrumentales en la precisión radiométrica de errores espaciales de una de las posibles nuevas configuraciones de array propuestas para construir un nuevo instrumento llamado Super-MIRAS. El propósito principal de este trabajo está orientado en el desarrollo de diferentes geometrías de arrays y arquitecturas de instrumentos para una futura misión en banda L, en la que se diseñaría un nuevo radiómetro de apertura sintética para mejorar la resolución espacial manteniendo la sensibilidad radiométrica.Postprint (published version

    Contribution to advanced sensor development for passive imaging of the Earth

    Get PDF
    This work has been formally undertaken within the frame of the scholarship number BES-2012-053917 of 1 December 2012, by the "Secretario de Estado de Investigación del Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad" related to the program "Formación de Personal Investigador (FPI)". The scholarship is related to the research project at the Universitat Politècnica de Catalunya (UPC) number TEC2011-25865. In a more general scope, this thesis is related to the Remote Sensing Laboratory (Signal Theory & Communication Department, UPC) on-going activities, within the SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) mission by the European Space Agency (ESA). These activities have been organized to provide original advances in the following four main topics: 1) SMOS calibration and performance. Since the launch of the instrument in 2009, SMOS imaging has been performing exclusively in co-polar mode. However, SMOS measurements are fully polarimetric. This feature was not operationally exploited due to the large errors yielded by full-pol images. In this context my work was addressed to support better characterization of the antenna. Based on the idea that SMOS polarization mode was recently implemented using Full-pol measurements, the so-called relative phases have been recomputed by using co-polar and cross-polar measurements. SMOS moderate Side Lobe Level (SLL) is caused by the limited coverage of the measured visibility samples in the frequency domain, so another objective of this work has been devoted to assess the impact of calibration errors into SMOS side lobes level (SLL). The main objective on this topic has been to reproduce by simulation SMOS measured side-lobe levels (SLL) by adding errors to a point source response, in order to identify the dominant source of error. During commissioning phase it was detected that SMOS heater system were introducing small and random sporadic PMS offset steps (jumps) in several units. Another work during this thesis has been devoted to mitigate those PMS jumps by trimming calibration date from single LICEF averaged TA jumps over the ocean. 2) SMOS spatial bias assessment. SMOS measurements still have mathematical image reconstruction errors that must be properly assessed. The aim of this work is to focus on the so-called "floor error", defined in an error free end-to-end image reconstruction simulation. In order to reduce this error, different inversion approaches have been implemented and tested, as the so-called Gibbs 2 approach 3) SMOS improved imaging. One of the problems of most concern within the SMOS mission is related to the so-called "land-sea contamination" (LSC), an artificial increase of ocean brightness temperature close to land masses. Therefore, a systematic assessment has been performed in this thesis in order to understand and mitigate this artifact. This subject is related to one of the main original outcomes of the thesis, since it has a relevant impact on the quality of SMOS imaging. The LSC mitigation technique developed during the work of the thesis has been presented and validated by different methods. 4) SMOS follow-on missions advanced configurations. This work is devoted to assess the impact of instrumental errors on the radiometric accuracy (pixel bias) of one of the selected array configurations of the so-called Super-MIRAS instrument. The aim of this work has been focused on the assessment of different array geometries and instrument architectures of future L-band synthetic aperture radiometers to improve spatial resolution while maintaining radiometric sensitivity.Esta tesis se ha llevado a cabo en el marco de la beca FPI BES-2012-053917 del 1 de diciembre de 2012, por el "Secretario de Estado de Investigación del Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad", asociada al proyecto TEC2011-25865 (Universidad Politècnica de Catalunya). En un sentido más amplio, el trabajo se engloba dentro de las actividades del Grupo de Teledetección (RSLab) del Departamento de Teoría de la Señal y Comunicaciones, UPC, en el marco de la misión SMOS (Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity) de la Agencia Espacial Europea del Espacio (ESA). El trabajo se divide en: 1) Calibración y prestaciones del sensor SMOS Desde el lanzamiento del instrumento en 2009, la imagen de SMOS se ha obtenido utilizando medidas en modo co-polar. Sin embargo, las medidas en SMOS se realizan en full-pol. Esto no se había llevado a cabo debido a los grandes errores que se obtenían con imágenes en full-pol. En este contexto mi trabajo se ha enfocado en la realización de una mejor caracterización de la antena. Basado en la idea de que el modo full-pol ha sido recientemente implementado en SMOS, las fases relativas entre antenas han sido recalculadas utilizando medidas co-polares y cross-polares. Los lóbulos secundarios de SMOS (SLL) son causados por la cobertura limitada de las visibilidades medidas en el dominio frecuencial, así que otro de los objetivos de este trabajo ha sido analizar el impacto de errores de calibración en los lóbulos secundarios de SMOS. Básicamente se han reproducido los lóbulos secundarios de SMOS mediantes simulaciones añadiendo errores a una fuente puntual, identificando las principales fuentes de error. Durante la fase de comisionado se detectó que el sistema de calentamiento de SMOS introducía pequeños saltos aleatorios del offset del PMS en diferentes unidades. Para hacer un seguimiento y corregir estos saltos se realizaron calibraciones de offset semanales justo después de la fase de comisionado, así que otro de los trabajos realizados en esta tesis ha sido dirigido a mitigar estos saltos introduciendo calibraciones adicionales antes de los mismos a partir de medir la temperatura de antena media calculada en el océano. 2) Técnicas de reducción de los errores espaciales SMOS tiene un error matemático de reconstrucción en la imagen que ha sido investigado en este trabajo. Así que este trabajo se ha focalizado en el "floor error" definido como el error de reconstrucción en un instrumento ideal libre de errores. Para reducir este error se han utilizado diferentes aproximaciones como Gibbs 2. 3) Mejoras en la inversión de imagen Uno de los mayores problemas durante los primeros cinco años de misión SMOS ha sido la llamada "land-sea contamination" (contaminación tierra-mar). Así pues, se ha realizado un estudio sistemático para comprender y mitigar este artefacto. Este tema está relacionado con uno de los descubrimientos más importantes de esta tesis ya que este tiene un gran impacto en la calidad de la imagen de SMOS. La técnica encontrada para mitigar este error es presentada y validada mediante diferentes métodos. 4) Misiones futuras Este trabajo está enfocado en la investigación del impacto de errores instrumentales en la precisión radiométrica de errores espaciales de una de las posibles nuevas configuraciones de array propuestas para construir un nuevo instrumento llamado Super-MIRAS. El propósito principal de este trabajo está orientado en el desarrollo de diferentes geometrías de arrays y arquitecturas de instrumentos para una futura misión en banda L, en la que se diseñaría un nuevo radiómetro de apertura sintética para mejorar la resolución espacial manteniendo la sensibilidad radiométrica

    Calibration of the MIRAS Radiometers

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    © 2018 IEEE. Personal use of this material is permitted. Permission from IEEE must be obtained for all other uses, in any current or future media, including reprinting/republishing this material for advertising or promotional purposes,creating new collective works, for resale or redistribution to servers or lists, or reuse of any copyrighted component of this work in other works.The microwave imaging radiometer with aperture synthesis (MIRAS) is formed by 69 total power radiometers, of which three are the noise-injection type. Their calibration is reviewed on the basis of the data gathered during more than eight years of operation. Internally calibrated gain and offset corrections with improved temporal stability are presented. New front-end loss characterization with lower seasonal dependence originated from external temperature swings is also proposed. Finally, a methodology to validate the external calibrations, with the instrument pointing to the cold sky, is developed. It seems to indicate that the change of orientation of the instrument, with associated thermal variations, may induce small changes in the radiometer front-end losses, thus introducing calibration errors.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    SMOS instrument performance and calibration after six years in orbit

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    ESA's Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission, launched 2-Nov-2009, has been in orbit for over 6 years, and its Microwave Imaging Radiometer with Aperture Synthesis (MIRAS) in two dimensions keeps working well. The calibration strategy remains overall as established after the commissioning phase, with a few improvements. The data for this whole period has been reprocessed with a new fully polarimetric version of the Level-1 processor which includes a refined calibration schema for the antenna losses. This reprocessing has allowed the assessment of an improved performance benchmark. An overview of the results and the progress achieved in both calibration and image reconstruction is presented in this contribution.Peer ReviewedPostprint (author's final draft

    SMOS Flight external calibration and monitoring

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    This project has been devoted to develop several tools to assess in-flight performance of the MIRAS SMOS amplitude calibration. It has been mainly focused to analyze the performance of current internal calibration by means of the so-called one-point calibration. This allowed to develop External CAS and Antenna efficiency correction parameters to improve overall MIRAS amplitude calibration accuracy

    Sensitivity Analysis of MIRAS/SMOS Instrument Calibration Parameters

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    The Final Project has been developed in the framework of the ESA’s Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission [1], during the development of Pre-Commissioning and Commissioning phases. The first steps of this work were in September 2009 with the Remote Sensing Laboratory group of TSC (Theory of Signal and Communications Department) at UPC [2]. One of the main objectives of any mission is to obtain and provide stable and accurate final products. So, a well-calibrated instrument provides the basis for stable and accurate measurements. The calibration of any Earth Observation sensor is a key stage which encompasses those tasks which are necessary to convert the raw measurement data into science data. The characterization of the instrument is a requirement for the development of the calibration activities. Characterization consists of the measurement of the typical behavior of instrument performances, including subsystems, which may affect the accuracy or quality of its response or derived data. The aim of this Final Project is to perform a comprehensive temperature sensitivity analysis of the instrument that is the SMOS payload. To do this, it is necessary to characterize the Power Measurement System (PMS) included in each receiver over the physical temperature. Additionally, the correlation phase related to the Local Oscillator (LO) located in each segment of the instrument is also analyzed. PMS calibration parameters (gain and offset) and the correlation phase (LO phase) are planned to be periodically updated during the mission to account for possible instrumental drifts. These parameters are tracked, initially on-ground and after in orbit, during the measurement mode using their respective corrections to remove physical temperature drifts

    Denormalization of visibilities for in-orbit calibration of interferometric radiometers

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    This paper reviews the relative calibration of an interferometric radiometer taking into account the experimental results of the first batch of receivers developed in the frame of the European Space Agency's Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity mission. Measurements show state-of-the-art baseline performance as long as the system is capable of correcting the effect of orbital temperature swing. A method to validate internal calibration during in-orbit deep-sky views and to correct linearity errors is also presented.Peer Reviewe
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