面向未来星座任务的新型小卫星无源微波辐射计技术(会议介绍)

Shannon T. Brown, W. Berg, T. Gaier, P. Kangaslahti, A. Kitiyakara, B. Lim, S. Padmanabhan, S. Reising, C. Venkatachalam
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引用次数: 1

摘要

小卫星和小型化仪器技术的出现为低地球轨道观测提供了新的范例。被动微波辐射计系统,如SSM/I, AMSR-E, AMSU, ATMS, WindSat和GMI,已经提供了重要的地球观测超过30年,包括但不限于地面风矢量,大气和地面温度,水蒸气,云,降水,雪和海冰。在过去几年中,一直在推动为这些关键测量开发小型卫星解决方案。小型卫星较低的部署成本使我们能够考虑使用这些系统进行地球观测的新方法。具体来说,我们可以考虑同质或异质星座的传感器元件分布在几个轨道平面上以改善重访时间,或者作为紧密间隔的列车来解决短时间尺度过程,例如发展对流。在本次演讲中,我们将讨论三种最近开发的互补小卫星技术演示传感器,它们跨越了现有微波环境传感器舰队目前提供的能力。这些系统是COWVR,一种低频全偏振锥形成像仪,TEMPEST-D,一种毫米波交叉轨迹成像仪/测深仪,以及TWICE,一种锥形亚毫米波成像仪/测深仪。COWVR是美国空军的一种技术演示传感器,设计成与SSM/I、AMSR、WindSat和GMI等传感器等效的小卫星。TEMPEST-D是美国宇航局地球风险投资公司的技术示范项目,与AMSU、ATMS和MHS等交叉轨道测深仪具有同等作用。TWICE是在NASA的一个技术项目下建造的,覆盖了尚未进入太空的频段。结合起来,这些系统提供了在6-800 GHz范围内对地球进行成像的潜力。当部署在一个星座中时,它们可以对陆地、海洋、大气和冰冻圈之间的动态物理过程和耦合进行新的观测。在本报告中,我们将重点介绍三个辐射计技术示范项目的传感器设计和现状。自2018年9月以来,TEMPEST-D一直在轨道上持续运行,COWVR将不早于2021年1月发射。我们将描述这些系统在星座中使用时所实现的独特观测,包括与地表和大气通量同时进行的动态大气过程(例如发展对流)的时间分辨测量。我们将展示这些新的小卫星传感器与等效的操作传感器之间的测量性能比较,并给出TEMPEST-D的在轨比较和来自COWVR和TWICE的发射前测量数据的例子。最后,我们将讨论由星座传感器列车和分布式星座实现的新任务概念,特别是因为它与美国NRC十年调查中确定的观测目标有关。我们将强调多传感器小卫星星座的潜力,展示最近从TEMPEST-D和RainCube获得的无源微波和降水雷达数据。
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New small satellite passive microwave radiometer rechnology for future constellation missions (Conference Presentation)
The advent of small satellites and miniaturized instrument technology enables a new paradigm for observation from Low Earth Orbit (LEO). Passive microwave radiometer systems, such as SSM/I, AMSR-E, AMSU, ATMS, WindSat and GMI, have been providing important Earth observations for over 30 years, including but not limited to surface wind vector, atmospheric and surface temperature, water vapor, clouds, precipitation, snow and sea ice. Over the past several years, there has been a push to develop small satellite solutions for these critical measurements. The lower deployment cost of small satellites allows us to consider new ways to use these systems for Earth observation. Specifically, we may consider homogenous or heterogeneous constellations with the sensor elements either distributed in several orbit planes to improve revisit time, or as closely spaced trains to resolved short time scale processes, such as developing convection. In this presentation, we will discuss three recently developed, complementary small satellite technology demonstration sensors that span the capability currently offered by the existing fleet of microwave environmental sensors. These systems are COWVR, a low-frequency fully-polarimetric conical imager, TEMPEST-D, a mm-wave cross-track imager/sounder and TWICE, a conical sub-mm wave imager/sounder. COWVR is a technology demonstration sensor for the US Air Force designed to be a small-satellite equivalent to sensors such as SSM/I, AMSR, WindSat and GMI. TEMPEST-D is a NASA Earth Ventures technology demonstration project and has equivalence with cross-track sounders such as AMSU, ATMS and MHS. TWICE, built under a NASA technology project, covers frequencies band not yet flown in space. Combined, these systems offer the potential to image the Earth from 6-800 GHz. When deployed in a constellation, they enable new observations of dynamic physical processes and coupling between land, ocean, atmosphere and cryosphere. In this presentation, we will highlight the sensor design and status of each of the three radiometer technology demonstration projects. TEMPEST-D has been continuously operating on-orbit since September 2018 and COWVR is due to launch no earlier than January 2021. We will describe unique observations enabled by these systems when used in constellations, including time resolved measurements of dynamic atmospheric processes (e.g. developing convection) simultaneously with surface and atmospheric fluxes. We will show measured performance comparisons between these new small-sat sensors to the equivalent operational sensor, giving examples of on-orbit comparisons for TEMPEST-D and pre-launch measured data from COWVR and TWICE. Finally, we will discuss new mission concepts enabled by constellation sensor trains and distributed constellations, particularly as it relates to the observation goals identified in the US NRC Decadal Survey. We will highlight the potential for multi-sensor small-satellite constellations, showing recently acquired passive microwave and precipitation radar data from TEMPEST-D and RainCube.
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Front Matter: Volume 11151 Development status and performance of the NASA payload for the Sentinel-6 mission (Conference Presentation) New small satellite passive microwave radiometer rechnology for future constellation missions (Conference Presentation) Status of the optical payloads development for the Earth Cloud Aerosol and Radiation Explorer (Conference Presentation) SWOT: development of the wide-swath surface water altimetry mission for oceanography and hydrology (Conference Presentation)
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