학술논문

Preliminary Studies on CIMR Antenna Pattern Brightness Temperature Compensation
Document Type
Periodical
Source
IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing IEEE J. Sel. Top. Appl. Earth Observations Remote Sensing Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing, IEEE Journal of. 15:173-183 2022
Subject
Geoscience
Signal Processing and Analysis
Power, Energy and Industry Applications
Antenna measurements
Microwave radiometry
Temperature measurement
Sea measurements
Pollution measurement
Brightness temperature
Microwave imaging
Antenna pattern correction (APC)
Copernicus imaging microwave radiometer (CIMR)
microwave radiometry
radiometric resolution
Language
ISSN
1939-1404
2151-1535
Abstract
Spaceborne microwave radiometry provides an essential contribution to monitoring the Earth with varying spatial resolution both related to the reflector dimension and the frequency of operation. The ESA's Copernicus imaging microwave radiometer (CIMR) mission aims at collecting the geophysical observables at a spatial resolution ranging from 60 km in L band to 4 km in Ka band. This goal can be achieved by equipping CIMR with a large unfurlable mesh reflector antenna. A limitation of the antenna design is that the antenna pattern includes grating lobes that contaminate the scene measurement with contributions originated far from the nominal footprint. This effect introduces inaccuracies in brightness temperature measurements, particularly when facing radiometric discontinuities, e.g., near the coastlines and sea ice edges, which can be greater than the mission required maximum of 0.5 K. The aim of this article is to assess a technique which will be able to correct the effects of antenna pattern and obtain reliable T B measurements. The analyzed simple technique is based on a regularized deconvolution of the antenna pattern to reconstruct the actual brightness temperatures. The technique was tested over a synthetic scenario that mimics both steep and smooth variations in spatial and thermal domains.