Title :
New Instrument Concepts for Ocean Sensing: Analysis of the PAU-Radiometer
Author :
Camps, Adriano ; Bosch-Lluis, Xavi ; Ramos-Pé, Isaac ; Marchá, Juan Fernando ; Izquierdo, Benjamín ; Rodrí, Nereida
Author_Institution :
Univ. Politecnica de Catalunya Campus Nord, Barcelona, Spain
Abstract :
Sea surface salinity can be remotely measured by means of L-band microwave radiometry. However, the brightness temperature also depends on the sea surface temperature and on the sea state, which is probably today one of the driving factors in the salinity retrieval error budgets of the European Space Agency´s Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission and the NASA-Comision Nacional de Actividades Espaciales Aquarius/SAC-D mission. This paper describes the Passive Advanced Unit (PAU) for ocean monitoring. PAU combines in a single instrument three different sensors: an L-band radiometer with digital beamforming (DBF) (PAU-RAD) to measure the brightness temperature of the sea at different incidence angles simultaneously, a global positioning system (GPS) reflectometer [PAU-reflectometer of Global Navigation Satellite Signals (GNSS-R)] also with DBF to measure the sea state from the delay-Doppler maps, and two infrared radiometers to provide sea surface temperature estimates. The key characteristic of this instrument is that both PAU-RAD and the PAU-GNSS/R share completely the RF/IF front-end, and analog-to-digital converters. Since in order to track the GPS-reflected signal, it is not possible to chop the antenna signal as in a Dicke radiometer, a new radiometer topology has been devised which makes uses of two receiving chains and a correlator, which has the additional advantage that both PAU-RAD and PAU-GNSS/R can be operated continuously and simultaneously to perform the sea-state corrections of the brightness temperature. This paper presents the main characteristics of the different PAU subsystems, and analyzes in detail the PAU-radiometer concept.
Keywords :
Global Positioning System; data acquisition; microwave measurement; ocean temperature; oceanographic techniques; radiometers; radiometry; remote sensing; seawater; Dicke radiometer; European Space Agency; Global Navigation Satellite Signals; L-band microwave radiometry; NASA-Comision Nacional de Actividades Espaciales Aquarius/SAC-D mission; PAU-radiometer; Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity mission; analog-to-digital converter; antenna signal; brightness temperature; delay-Doppler maps; digital beamforming; global positioning system reflectometer; incidence angle; infrared radiometer; ocean monitoring; ocean sensing instrument; passive advanced unit; radiometer topology; remote measurement; salinity retrieval error budget; sea surface salinity; sea surface temperature; sea-state correction; Brightness temperature; Infrared sensors; Instruments; L-band; Microwave radiometry; Ocean temperature; Sea measurements; Sea surface; Soil measurements; Temperature sensors; Correlator; Global Navigation Satellite Signals (GNSS); radiometry; reflectometry; sea salinity; sensitivity;
Journal_Title :
Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TGRS.2007.894925