학술논문

Receiver Performance of the Superconducting Submillimeter-Wave Limb-Emission Sounder (SMILES) on the International Space Station
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing IEEE Trans. Geosci. Remote Sensing Geoscience and Remote Sensing, IEEE Transactions on. 51(7):3791-3802 Jul, 2013
Subject
Geoscience
Signal Processing and Analysis
Receivers
Temperature measurement
Noise
Calibration
Extraterrestrial measurements
Antenna feeds
Atmospheric measurements
Atmospheric measurement
microwave radiometry
radiometer calibration
spaceborne radiometer
submillimeter-wave receiver
Language
ISSN
0196-2892
1558-0644
Abstract
Superconducting devices were used to make atmospheric limb observations from space for the first time. The Superconducting Submillimeter-Wave Limb-Emission Sounder (SMILES) is a superconductor–insulator–superconductor (SIS) receiver in frequency bands of 625 and 650 GHz. SMILES was deployed on the International Space Station. SMILES observed atmospheric limb spectra for six months from October 2009 to April 2010. The sensitivity of the receiver is the most important performance parameter for microwave atmospheric limb observation, in which the receiver measures, sometimes very weak, thermal line emissions. The SMILES SIS receivers demonstrated limb observations with a sensitivity more than one order of magnitude better than that of conventional limb sensors. The sensitivity of the SMILES receivers in space was 315 K–322 K in a definition of single-sideband system noise temperature at the antenna; this met the instrument requirement with a large margin. The SMILES-receiver stability also met the requirement; the stability time of the receiver was 8 s (and 500 s for spectroscopic data) in a frequency resolution of about 1.1 MHz. Although the stability time is shorter than the calibration period (53 s) in operational observation, the variance increment by the drift noise is found to be insignificant. The temperature resolution for the continuum signal is estimated to be better than 0.27 K. There was no evidence that the stability of the SIS receiver was influenced by the temperature fluctuation of the 4-K cooling system, which consists of a two-stage Stirling cooler and a Joule–Thomson cycle cooler. The suppression of baseline ripples is another important performance parameter of the receiver for spectral measurement like the SMILES receivers. As a result of our design of low-standing-wave optics, we found no baseline ripple in the observed spectra of SMILES in practical level.