Abstract

The Soil Moisture Active Passive (SMAP) mission was launched January 31st, 2015. It is designed to measure the soil moisture over land using a combined active / passive L-band system. Due to the Aquarius mission, L-band model functions for ocean winds and salinity are already mature and may be directly applied to the SMAP mission. In contrast to Aquarius, the higher resolution and scanning geometry of SMAP allows for wide-swath ocean winds and salinities to be retrieved. We have found that the SMAP radiometer displays sensitivity all the way up to the most extreme wind speeds, possibly as high as 70 m/s, far beyond what is capable with typical C and Ku-band ocean wind scatterometers. In previous work we have validated the SMAP high wind speeds against Rapid Scatterometer (RapidScat) and Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer (SFMR). In this work we consider the size of the SMAP cyclones and compare them to the Automated Tropical Cyclone Forecasting (ATCF) system B-deck files and we update the SFMR analysis with an additional year of data to strengthen the previous conclusions.

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