Abstract

The issue of Radio Frequency Interference (RFI) is a widespread problem in most microwave Earth observation missions, and passive instruments are particularly sensitive to RFI. This is the case for SMOS, Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity, a satellite of the European Space Agency, which operates in the 1400–1427 MHz band, where all emissions are prohibited. Notwithstanding this regulatory framework, SMOS has been affected by RFI all around the world since the beginning of operations in 2010. In the first years of operations, manual detection processes and reporting of RFI to National Regulatory Authorities were in place in order to mitigate the detected sources. After 12 years, a tool called ERMIT (ESA RFI Monitoring and Information Tool) has been developed at ESAC (European Space Astronomy Center). This tool helps the SMOS RFI team in its spectrum monitoring tasks (e.g., RFI monitoring, logging, and reporting) thus allowing it to counteract RFI pollution more efficiently, providing external users with detailed and user-friendly information on the L-band RFI observed by SMOS. The ERMIT tool is now publicly available. This document aims at describing the needs that lead to the development of ERMIT and at presenting the information made available by it.

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