Abstract

In microwave radiometric remote sensing, undetected radio frequency interference (RFI) can adversely affect the accuracy of the science products. A method is presented to adaptively tune the parameters of an RFI detection algorithm which controls the equivalent brightness temperature of undetected RFI. The method is adaptive in the sense that it adjusts to variations in the RFI environment, e.g., from high RFI conditions near some population centers to low RFI conditions in the tropical Pacific Ocean. The RFI environment is characterized by inferring the distribution of low-level undetected RFI from that of high-level detected RFI using appropriate scaling arguments. The resulting tuned algorithm adjusts its detection threshold to equalize the brightness temperature calibration bias due to RFI at the expense of the now variable measurement precision (noise equivalent delta temperature). This tradeoff between calibration bias and measurement precision can be represented as a modified version of the classic receiver-operating-characteristic curve. The radiometer on the Aquarius/SAC-D mission is used as an example.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call