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Keywords = conically scanning scatterometer

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28 pages, 7616 KB  
Article
Optimization of Airborne Scatterometer NRCS Semicircular Sampling for Sea Wind Retrieval
by Alexey Nekrasov, Alena Khachaturian and Colin Fidge
Remote Sens. 2023, 15(6), 1613; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs15061613 - 16 Mar 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1843
Abstract
Airborne scatterometer capability depends on not only the device’s technical characteristics but also the scheme used for surface observations. Typically, a rotating-beam scatterometer uses a circular scheme for sampling normalized radar cross-sections (NRCS) at wind measurements over the sea. Here, we investigate wind [...] Read more.
Airborne scatterometer capability depends on not only the device’s technical characteristics but also the scheme used for surface observations. Typically, a rotating-beam scatterometer uses a circular scheme for sampling normalized radar cross-sections (NRCS) at wind measurements over the sea. Here, we investigate wind retrieval using an updated semicircular scheme, providing the NRCS sampling at various combinations of incidence angles within the range 30° to 60°. The effectiveness of the wind retrieval using our semicircular sampling scheme was evaluated using Monte Carlo simulations, and we then developed corresponding wind algorithms that used a geophysical model function (GMF). As a result of the study, we found that a semicircular sampling scheme is well suited for wind retrieval over the sea using a rotating-beam scatterometer. We showed that a semicircular scheme can provide wind retrieval accuracies similar to those achievable with a conventional circular scheme, although the semicircular scheme requires approximately three times the number of NRCS samples integrated in each azimuth sector. Most importantly, however, the semicircular scheme enabled a maximum altitude for wind retrieval of twice the height possible with a circular scheme. In this study, we also demonstrate that the wind speed accuracy tends to increase with an increase in the incidence angle and similarly for the wind direction accuracy. Nonetheless, we then show that the simultaneous use of the NRCS sampling scheme at several incidence angles can increase the wind retrieval accuracy, especially when three or four incidence angles are used. The obtained results can be used to enhance airborne scatterometers and multimode radars operated in a scatterometer mode, including airborne high-altitude conical scanning radars, and can be applied to new remote sensing systems’ development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Remote Sensing Applications in Ocean Observation (Second Edition))
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10 pages, 2128 KB  
Article
Using Semicircular Sampling to Increase Sea-Wind Retrieval Altitude with a High-Altitude UAV Scatterometer
by Alexey Nekrasov, Alena Khachaturian and Colin Fidge
Drones 2022, 6(9), 223; https://doi.org/10.3390/drones6090223 - 26 Aug 2022
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1955
Abstract
Currently, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are widely used due to their low cost and flexibility. In particular, they are used in remote sensing as airborne platforms for various instruments. Here, we investigate the capability of a conical scanning radar operated as a scatterometer [...] Read more.
Currently, unmanned aerial vehicles (UAVs) are widely used due to their low cost and flexibility. In particular, they are used in remote sensing as airborne platforms for various instruments. Here, we investigate the capability of a conical scanning radar operated as a scatterometer mounted on a high-altitude UAV to perform sea surface wind retrieval based on an appropriate geophysical model function (GMF). Increasing the maximum altitude of the wind retrieval method’s applicability is an important problem for UAV or manned aircraft scatterometers. For this purpose, we consider the possibility of increasing the method’s maximum altitude by applying a semicircular scheme for azimuth normalized radar cross section (NRCS) sampling instead of a whole 360° circular scheme. We developed wind retrieval algorithms for both semicircular and circular NRCS sampling schemes and evaluated them using Monte Carlo simulations. The simulations showed that the semicircular scheme for azimuth NRCS sampling enables twice the maximum altitude for wind retrieval compared to a 360° circular scheme. At the same time, however, the semicircular scheme requires approximately three times the number of integrated NRCS samples in each azimuth sector to provide equivalent wind retrieval accuracy. Nonetheless, our results confirm that the semicircular azimuth NRCS sampling scheme is well-suited for wind retrieval, and any wind retrieval errors are within the typical range for scatterometer wind recovery. The obtained results can be used for enhancing existing UAV and aircraft radars, and for the development of new remote sensing systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Unmanned Aerial Vehicles in Atmospheric Research)
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19 pages, 3531 KB  
Article
A Neural Network-Based Rain Effect Correction Method for HY-2A Scatterometer Backscatter Measurements
by Xuetong Xie, Jing Wang and Mingsen Lin
Remote Sens. 2020, 12(10), 1648; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12101648 - 21 May 2020
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2833
Abstract
The backscattering coefficients measured by Ku-band scatterometers are strongly affected by rainfall, resulting in a systematic error in sea surface wind field retrieval. In rainy conditions, the radar signals are subject to absorption by the raindrops in their round-trip propagation through the atmosphere, [...] Read more.
The backscattering coefficients measured by Ku-band scatterometers are strongly affected by rainfall, resulting in a systematic error in sea surface wind field retrieval. In rainy conditions, the radar signals are subject to absorption by the raindrops in their round-trip propagation through the atmosphere, while the backscatter of raindrops raises the echo energy. In addition, raindrops give rise to roughness by impinging the ocean surface, resulting in an increase in the echo energy measured by a scatterometer. Under moderate wind conditions, the comprehensive impact of rainfall causes the wind speeds retrieved by the scatterometer to be higher than their actual values. The HY-2A scatterometer is a Ku-band, pencil-beam, conically scanning scatterometer. To correct the systematic error of the HY-2A scatterometer measurement in rainy conditions, a neural network model is proposed according to the characteristics of the backscatter coefficients measured by the HY-2A scatterometer in the presence of rain. With the neural network, the wind fields of the European Centre for Medium-range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) reanalysis data were used as the reference to correct the deviation in backscatter coefficients measured by the HY-2A scatterometer in rainy conditions, and the accuracy in wind speeds retrieved using the corrected backscatter coefficients was significantly improved. Compared with the cases of wind retrieval without rain effect correction, the wind speeds retrieved from the corrected backscatter coefficients by the neural network show a much lower systematic deviation, which indicates that the neural network can effectively remove the systematic deviation in the backscatter coefficients and the retrieved wind speeds caused by rain. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Ocean Remote Sensing)
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59 pages, 31554 KB  
Article
Estimating Ocean Vector Winds and Currents Using a Ka-Band Pencil-Beam Doppler Scatterometer
by Ernesto Rodríguez, Alexander Wineteer, Dragana Perkovic-Martin, Tamás Gál, Bryan W. Stiles, Noppasin Niamsuwan and Raquel Rodriguez Monje
Remote Sens. 2018, 10(4), 576; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs10040576 - 9 Apr 2018
Cited by 92 | Viewed by 12657
Abstract
Ocean surface currents and winds are tightly coupled essential climate variables, and, given their short time scales, observing them at the same time and resolution is of great interest. DopplerScatt is an airborne Ka-band scatterometer that has been developed under NASA’s Instrument Incubator [...] Read more.
Ocean surface currents and winds are tightly coupled essential climate variables, and, given their short time scales, observing them at the same time and resolution is of great interest. DopplerScatt is an airborne Ka-band scatterometer that has been developed under NASA’s Instrument Incubator Program (IIP) to provide a proof of concept of the feasability of measuring these variables using pencil-beam scanning Doppler scatterometry. In the first half of this paper, we present the Doppler scatterometer measurement and processing principles, paying particular attention to deriving a complete measurement error budget. Although Doppler radars have been used for the estimation of surface currents, pencil-beam Doppler Scatterometry offers challenges and opportunities that require separate treatment. The calibration of the Doppler measurement to remove platform and instrument biases has been a traditional challenge for Doppler systems, and we introduce several new techniques to mitigate these errors when conical scanning is used. The use of Ka-band for airborne Doppler scatterometry measurements is also new, and, in the second half of the paper, we examine the phenomenology of the mapping from radar cross section and radial velocity measurements to winds and surface currents. To this end, we present new Ka-band Geophysical Model Functions (GMFs) for winds and surface currents obtained from multiple airborne campaigns. We find that the wind Ka-band GMF exhibits similar dependence on wind speed as that for Ku-band scatterometers, such as QuikSCAT, albeit with much greater upwind-crosswind modulation. The surface current GMF at Ka-band is significantly different from that at C-band, and, above 4.5 m/s has a weak dependence on wind speed, although still dependent on wind direction. We examine the effects of Bragg-wave modulation by long waves through a Modululation Transfer Function (MTF), and show that the observed surface current dependence on winds is consistent with past Ka-band MTF observations. Finally, we provide a preliminary validation of our geophysical retrievals, which will be expanded in subsequent publications. Our results indicate that Ka-band Doppler scatterometry could be a feasible method for wide-swath simultaneous measurements of winds and currents from space. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Ocean Surface Currents: Progress in Remote Sensing and Validation)
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16 pages, 1398 KB  
Article
A Non-MLE Approach for Satellite Scatterometer Wind Vector Retrievals in Tropical Cyclones
by Suleiman Alsweiss, Rafik Hanna, Peth Laupattarakasem, W. Linwood Jones, Christopher C. Hennon and Ruiyao Chen
Remote Sens. 2014, 6(5), 4133-4148; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs6054133 - 5 May 2014
Cited by 8 | Viewed by 9375
Abstract
Satellite microwave scatterometers are the principal source of global synoptic-scale ocean vector wind (OVW) measurements for a number of scientific and operational oceanic wind applications. However, for extreme wind events such as tropical cyclones, their performance is significantly degraded. This paper presents a [...] Read more.
Satellite microwave scatterometers are the principal source of global synoptic-scale ocean vector wind (OVW) measurements for a number of scientific and operational oceanic wind applications. However, for extreme wind events such as tropical cyclones, their performance is significantly degraded. This paper presents a novel OVW retrieval algorithm for tropical cyclones which improves the accuracy of scatterometer based ocean surface winds when compared to low-flying aircraft with in-situ and remotely sensed observations. Unlike the traditional maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) wind vector retrieval technique, this new approach sequentially estimates scalar wind directions and wind speeds. A detailed description of the algorithm is provided along with results for ten QuikSCAT hurricane overpasses (from 2003–2008) to evaluate the performance of the new algorithm. Results are compared with independent surface wind analyses from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) Hurricane Research Division’s H*Wind surface analyses and with the corresponding SeaWinds Project’s L2B-12.5 km OVW products. They demonstrate that the proposed algorithm extends the SeaWinds capability to retrieve wind speeds beyond the current range of approximately 35 m/s (minimal hurricane category-1) with improved wind direction accuracy, making this new approach a potential candidate for current and future conically scanning scatterometer wind retrieval algorithms. Full article
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18 pages, 3201 KB  
Article
A Novel Integrated Algorithm for Wind Vector Retrieval from Conically Scanning Scatterometers
by Xuetong Xie, Zhou Huang, Mingsen Lin, Kehai Chen, Youguo Lan, Xinzhe Yuan, Xiaomin Ye and Juhong Zou
Remote Sens. 2013, 5(12), 6180-6197; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs5126180 - 25 Nov 2013
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 5907
Abstract
Due to the lower efficiency and the larger wind direction error of traditional algorithms, a novel integrated wind retrieval algorithm is proposed for conically scanning scatterometers. The proposed algorithm has the dual advantages of less computational cost and higher wind direction retrieval accuracy [...] Read more.
Due to the lower efficiency and the larger wind direction error of traditional algorithms, a novel integrated wind retrieval algorithm is proposed for conically scanning scatterometers. The proposed algorithm has the dual advantages of less computational cost and higher wind direction retrieval accuracy by integrating the wind speed standard deviation (WSSD) algorithm and the wind direction interval retrieval (DIR) algorithm. It adopts wind speed standard deviation as a criterion for searching possible wind vector solutions and retrieving a potential wind direction interval based on the change rate of the wind speed standard deviation. Moreover, a modified three-step ambiguity removal method is designed to let more wind directions be selected in the process of nudging and filtering. The performance of the new algorithm is illustrated by retrieval experiments using 300 orbits of SeaWinds/QuikSCAT L2A data (backscatter coefficients at 25 km resolution) and co-located buoy data. Experimental results indicate that the new algorithm can evidently enhance the wind direction retrieval accuracy, especially in the nadir region. In comparison with the SeaWinds L2B Version 2 25 km selected wind product (retrieved wind fields), an improvement of 5.1° in wind direction retrieval can be made by the new algorithm for that region. Full article
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