학술논문

Intercomparisons of Brightness Temperature Observations Over Land From AMSR-E and WindSat
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sensing Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on. 52(1):452-464 Jan, 2014
Subject
Geoscience
Signal Processing and Analysis
Instruments
Ocean temperature
Sensors
Brightness temperature
Soil moisture
Sea surface
Microwave radiometry
Passive microwave remote sensing
radiometers
soil moisture
Language
ISSN
0196-2892
1558-0644
Abstract
The Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer-EOS (AMSR-E) on Aqua and WindSat on Coriolis instruments have collected multichannel passive microwave data over the global land and oceans since 2002 and 2003, respectively. AMSR-E on Aqua ceased operation in October 2011 due to a malfunction in the antenna scanning mechanism. AMSR-E and WindSat have similar frequencies, bandwidths, polarizations, incidence angles and instantaneous fields of view (IFOVs), but there are some differences in their configurations. The altitudes and local overpass times also differ between the AMSR-E and WindSat sensors. The time series of data from the two instruments have a long period of overlap, which can be used to intercompare and cross-calibrate the instrument data sets taking into account the instrument differences. This would allow retrieval of geophysical parameters using common algorithms that could take advantage of the increased time duration and sampling coverage afforded by combining data from the two sensors. In this paper, we focus on land applications and compare the multichannel data from these two sensors over land. Channels useful primarily for soil moisture and vegetation water content studies (i.e., $\sim$6, $\sim$ 10, $\sim$18, and $\sim$ 37 GHz at H- and V-pol) are used in the comparisons. To minimize differences caused by surface temperature effects related to local overpass times, only descending passes (with Equator crossing times for AMSR-E of 1:30 a.m. and WindSat 6:00 a.m.) are considered. Homogeneous and temporally stable sites such as Dome-C, Antarctica and the Amazon forest, and a flat and bare region in the Sahara desert are chosen to evaluate similarities and differences among comparable channel observations. Taking into consideration the sensor configurations and geophysical conditions during the descending overpasses, reasonably good agreement is observed between AMSR-E and WindSat measurements over the globe.