36 research outputs found

    SATELLITE ATTITUDE ANALYSIS USING THE VICARIOUS COLD CALIBRATION METHOD FOR MICROWAVE RADIOMETERS

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    ABSTRACT A method for estimating the pitch and roll errors of a satellite with an onboard conical scanning microwave radiometer is described. The method makes use of the vicarious cold calibration algorithm which derives a stable cold brightness temperature (TB) over ocean. This cold TB is sensitive to the Earth Incidence Angle (EIA) of the radiometer. Given no pitch or roll errors, the EIA can be modeled as a function of the Earth radius and altitude of the satellite. Deviation from this EIA can then be used to estimate the pitch and roll errors. The pitch/roll algorithm is applied to the current spaceborne microwave radiometer WindSat to show its performance, and the results are compared to the derived pitch and roll of WindSat that are found using a different attitude analysis method

    Spaceborne Microwave Radiometry: Calibration, Intercalibration, and Science Applications.

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    Spaceborne microwave radiometry is the backbone for assimilation into numerical weather forecasts and provides important information for Earth and environment science. The extensive radiometric data must go through the process of calibration and intercalibration prior to science application. This work deals with the entire process by providing systematic methods and addressing critical challenges. These methods have been applied to NASA and JAXA’s Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) mission and many other radiometers to make important contributions and to solve long-standing issues with coastal science applications. Specifically, it addresses four important challenges: 1) improving cold calibration with scan dependent characterization; 2) reducing the uncertainty of warm calibration; 3) deriving calibration dependence across the full range of brightness temperatures with both cold and warm calibration; and 4) investigating calibration variability and dependence on geophysical parameters. One critical challenge in science applications of radiometer data is that coastal science products from radiometers have previously been largely unavailable due to land contamination. We therefore develop methods to correct for land contamination and derive coastal science products. This thesis addresses these challenges by developing their solutions and then applying them to the GPM mission and its radiometer constellation.PhDAtmospheric, Oceanic and Space SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/120728/1/johnxun_1.pd

    Microwave Radiometer Inter-Calibration: Algorithm Development and Application.

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    Microwave radiometer inter-calibration is an essential component of any effort to combine measurements from two or more radiometers into one dataset for scientific studies. One spaceborne instrument in low Earth orbit is not sufficient to perform long-term climate studies or to provide measurements more than twice per day at any given location on Earth. Measurements from several radiometers are necessary for analyses over extended temporal and spatial ranges. In order to combine the measurements, the radiometers need to be inter-calibrated due to the instruments having unique instrument designs and calibrations. Inter-calibration ensures that consistent scientific parameters are retrieved from the radiometers. The development of a cold end inter-calibration algorithm is presented. The algorithm makes use of vicarious cold calibration, along with the double difference method, to calculate calibration differences between radiometers. The performance of the algorithm is characterized using data from current conical scanning microwave radiometers. The vicarious cold calibration double difference is able to sufficiently account for design differences between two radiometers including frequency, earth incidence angle, and orbital characteristics. An estimate of the uncertainty in the inter-calibration algorithm is given as a result of potential errors in the geophysical inputs and improper accounting of seasonal and diurnal variability. The vicarious cold calibration double difference method is shown to be a valid and accurate inter-calibration algorithm. Results are compared with calibration differences calculated using alternate algorithms and sufficient agreement is attained. Inter-calibration is shown to be necessary for achieving consistency in retrieved scientific parameters by using the vicarious cold calibration double difference method to inter-calibrate two radiometers that are then used to derive rain accumulations. Inter-calibration results in a significant improvement in the rain accumulation agreement between the radiometers. This validates inter-calibration algorithm development and shows that it has a positive impact on achieving consistency in scientific parameter retrievals.PhDAtmospheric, Oceanic and Space SciencesUniversity of Michigan, Horace H. Rackham School of Graduate Studieshttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/107078/1/rakro_1.pd
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