Abstract

The radiometer on the NASA Soil Moisture Active/Passive (SMAP) mission is a fully polarimetric instrument that operates at L-band in the spectrum window at 1400–1427 MHz protected for passive use only. A unique feature of the radiometer is the fully digital back-end which permits direct computation of the third and fourth Stokes parameters: the real and imaginary part of the correlation of signal at horizontal and vertical polarizations, respectively. In particular, the SMAP conical scanning geometry provides the opportunity to look at the global distribution of the fourth Stokes parameter, TA4, at constant incidence angle (40°). A striking feature of TA4 is the existence of a strong (±10 K) spurious signal at coastlines. This article provides examples of the spikes and an explanation of the cause. Simulations have shown that the spurious signal is associated with antenna imperfections, such as cross polarization coupling and phase mismatch between polarizations.

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