Abstract

The Soil Moisture Active/Passive satellite microwave radiometer has been providing measurements of L-band thermal emission from Earth for more than 2 years. SMAP retrieves surface soil moisture from its brightness temperature measurements, and continues to provide science products to the user community. Even though the SMAP radiometer operates in a protected band, its measurements are still corrupted by Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) caused by illegal in-band transmissions or out-of-band emissions. The SMAP radiometer was designed to include special hardware to enable RFI detection and filtering using multiple detection algorithms. Given the good overall performance of SMAP algorithms to detect RFI sources, an automatic tool to report source properties automatically was developed and is now operational. This paper provides a preliminary analysis of the outputs of this reporting tool with a particular focus on the evolution of the RFI environment observed by SMAP during its period of operations.

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