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

Abstract

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

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