Imaging Microwave Radiometers in Space - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Imaging Microwave Radiometers in Space

Description:

Imaging Microwave Radiometers in Space. Per Gloersen. Oceans and Ice Branch (971) ... Prime motive evolving after launch: Mapping global sea ice coverage. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:156
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: perglo
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Imaging Microwave Radiometers in Space


1
Imaging Microwave Radiometers in Space
  • Per Gloersen
  • Oceans and Ice Branch (971)

2
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
3
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.

4
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.- The first successful microwave imager
    in space.

5
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.- The first successful microwave imager
    in space.- Original motive Mapping global
    rainfall rates.

6
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.- The first successful microwave imager
    in space.- Original motive Mapping global
    rainfall rates.- Prime motive evolving after
    launch Mapping global sea ice coverage.

7
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.- The first successful microwave imager
    in space.- Original motive Mapping global
    rainfall rates.- Prime motive evolving after
    launch Mapping global sea ice coverage.
  • October 1978 Nimbus 7 launched with the
    Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR)
    on board.

8
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.- The first successful microwave imager
    in space.- Original motive Mapping global
    rainfall rates.- Prime motive evolving after
    launch Mapping global sea ice coverage.
  • October 1978 Nimbus 7 launched with the
    Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR)
    on board.- Multiple channels permitted
    distinguishing between first-year and multiyear
    sea ice types.

9
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.- The first successful microwave imager
    in space.- Original motive Mapping global
    rainfall rates.- Prime motive evolving after
    launch Mapping global sea ice coverage.
  • October 1978 Nimbus 7 launched with the
    Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR)
    on board.- Multiple channels permitted
    distinguishing between first-year and multiyear
    sea ice types.- Nearly nine-year lifetime
    allowed SMMR to be a major contributor to the
    present 32-year sea ice record.

10
The Nimbus Microwave Imager Heritage
  • December 1972 Nimbus 5 launched with the
    Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (ESMR)
    on board.- The first successful microwave imager
    in space.- Original motive Mapping global
    rainfall rates.- Prime motive evolving after
    launch Mapping global sea ice coverage.
  • October 1978 Nimbus 7 launched with the
    Scanning Multichannel Microwave Radiometer (SMMR)
    on board.- Multiple channels permitted
    distinguishing between first-year and multiyear
    sea ice types.- Nearly nine-year lifetime
    allowed SMMR to be a major contributor to the
    present 32-year sea ice record.- Multiple
    channels also permitted observation of global sea
    surface temperatures independent of cloud
    cover.

11
The Nimbus 5 ESMR
  • 103 antenna sticks with independent phase
    shifters
  • Phase shifters driven withphase differences to
    achievecross-track scanning at nadir,with no
    moving parts.
  • Single-channel, horizontally-polarized operation
    at a wave-length of 1.55 cm.

12
  • This was the first and only time the Weddell
    Polynya was ever observed.

13
The Nimbus 7 SMMR
  • Launched in October 1978
  • Turned off in August 1987

14
The Nimbus 7 SMMR
  • Launched in October 1978
  • Turned off in August 1987
  • Provided 1/3 of the baseline 32-year sea ice
    extent data

15
The Nimbus 7 SMMR
  • Launched in October 1978
  • Turned off in August 1987
  • Provided 1/3 of the baseline 32-year sea ice
    extent data
  • The other 2/3 provided by ESMR three DOD SSMIs

16
Nimbus 7 SMMR
  • Shown before launch in the anechoic test chamber
  • The solar panels are not attached.
  • The radiometers are in the sensory ring.
  • The oscillatory reflector is located to the right
    on top of the sensory ring.
  • There are 10 channels receiving vertically and
    horizontally polarized radiances at 5 different
    wavelengths 0.8, 1.4, 1.7, 2.7, and 4.6 cm
  • Over 150 articles using SMMR data have been
    published in scientific journals.

17
What can SMMR do with its ten channels?
  • Greatly improves on ESMRs ability to obtain sea
    ice concentrations.

18
What can SMMR do with its ten channels?
  • Greatly improves on ESMRs ability to obtain sea
    ice concentrations.
  • Permits distinguishing between first-year and
    multiyear sea ice.

19
What can SMMR do with its ten channels?
  • Greatly improves on ESMRs ability to obtain sea
    ice concentrations.
  • Permits distinguishing between first-year and
    multiyear sea ice.
  • Obtains sea surface temperatures globally through
    clouds.

20
What can SMMR do with its ten channels?
  • Greatly improves on ESMRs ability to obtain sea
    ice concentrations.
  • Permits distinguishing between first-year and
    multiyear sea ice.
  • Obtains sea surface temperatures globally through
    clouds.
  • Determines depth of snow cover in large water
    basins.
  • Measures amount of near-surface water in the soil
    of large agricultural areas.

21
What can SMMR do with its ten channels?
  • Greatly improves on ESMRs ability to obtain sea
    ice concentrations.
  • Permits distinguishing between first-year and
    multiyear sea ice.
  • Obtains sea surface temperatures globally through
    clouds.
  • Determines depth of snow cover in large water
    basins.
  • Measures amount of near-surface water in the soil
    of large agricultural areas.
  • Can determine cloud water content and atmospheric
    water vapor.
  • Makes observations of global rainfall rates.

22
What can SMMR do with its ten channels?
  • Greatly improves on ESMRs ability to obtain sea
    ice concentrations.
  • Permits distinguishing between first-year and
    multiyear sea ice.
  • Obtains sea surface temperatures globally through
    clouds.
  • Determines depth of snow cover in large water
    basins.
  • Measures amount of near-surface water in the soil
    of large agricultural areas.
  • Can determine cloud water content and atmospheric
    water vapor.
  • Makes observations of global rainfall rates.
  • In what follows, we shall describe sea ice and
    SST observations.- Time-lapse movie of sea ice
    around Antarctica.- A record of multiyear sea
    ice concentrations.- Time-lapse movie of SST in
    the Indo-Pacific oceans.

23
Low-pass filtered AA SICs
18-Year Record of Low-pass-filtered Sea Ice
Concentrations from the Nimbus-7 SMMR and the
SSMIs on the F-8, F-11 and F-13 DMSP Satellites,
showing the Antarctic Circumpolar Wave in the
interior of the ice pack.
24
SST Anomalies of the Indo-Pacific Basin
25
What is the legacy of ESMR and SMMR?
  • They both contributed a significant part of the
    present 33-year sea ice coverage data set that
    has been used to investigate climate trends.
  • SMMR has contributed a significant part of a
    25-year multiyear sea ice data that will also be
    important for climate change studies.

26
32 years of the sea ice coverage record
  • Arctic Antarctic

27
24 years of multiyear sea ice observations
28
Credits
  • ESMR- Principal Investigator Thomas T.
    Wilheit- CoI Per Gloersen- Conceiver William
    Nordberg- Collaborators William J. Campbell,
    Alfred T.C. Chang
  • SMMR- Instrument Scientist and Experiment Team
    Leader Per Gloersen- Team Members (sanctioned
    by Hqs) William J. Campbell (sea ice, ice
    sheets, snow) Ola M. Johannessen (sea ice,
    oceans) Kristina B. Katsaros (atmosphere) Klaus
    F. Kunzi (snow) Duncan B. Ross (oceans) David
    Staelin (atmosphere) E.P.L Windsor
    (oceans) Preben Gudmandsen (ice sheets) René O.
    Ramseier (sea ice)- Collaborators Donald J.
    Cavalieri, Alfred T.C. Chang, Thomas T.
    Wilheit Frank T. Barath (co-proposer), Edward
    Langham

29
Continuing the tradition
  • Special Sensor/Microwave Imager (SSMI)- A
    multispectral imager with similar channels to
    SMMR, but no 4.6 cm channel used for SST
    measurements- Flown on three different DOD/DMSP
    satellites- One month overlap with SMMR data -
    Has extended the sea ice record to 32 years

30
Continuing the tradition
  • Special Sensor/Microwave Imager (SSMI)- A
    multispectral imager with similar channels to
    SMMR, but no 4.6 cm channel used for SST
    measurements- Flown on three different DOD/DMSP
    satellites- One-month overlap with SMMR data-
    Has extended the sea ice record to 32 years
  • Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR-E)-
    Launched in 2002- Contains channels similar to
    SMMR plus two 3 mm channels- Has about twice the
    spatial resolution of SMMR SSMI
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com