Abstract

The rapid evolution of the effects observed in various areas of our planet related to climate change poses urgent questions about the knowledge of the state of the polar area and requires satellite acquisitions with fine spatial resolution and high accuracy to develop advanced products. The Copernicus Imaging Microwave Radiometer (CIMR) mission, based on a multifrequency microwave radiometer and designed to observe the ocean, sea ice, and Arctic environment, requires brightness temperature measurements with a total absolute uncertainty of 0.5 K and a spatial resolution of 5 km. This constraint demands very large reflectors with a gain value of tens of decibels. Mechanical constraints will be attained by using a mesh reflector, which guarantees the required resolution but with the drawback of a radiation pattern characterized by many grating lobes that contaminate the value of the brightness temperature associated with the boresight position. In this article, an antenna pattern correction (APC) is proposed to correct these effects. The algorithm takes advantage of an iterative formulation based on the Jacobi Method, providing a suitable correction that depends on the chosen spatial resolution. The APC algorithm was tested at both K- and Ka-bands with similar performance. Here, only the results from the latter are shown, as its antenna pattern is the most challenging among CIMR.

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