SMOS radiometer in 1400–1427 MHz: Impact of the RFI environment and approach to its mitigation and cancellation.

Autor: Daganzo, E., Oliva, R., Kerr, Y., Nieto, S., Richaume, P., Mecklenburg, S.
Zdroj: 2012 IEEE International Geoscience & Remote Sensing Symposium; 1/ 1/2012, p3316-3319, 4p
Abstrakt: The SMOS radiometer operates within the Earth Exploration Satellite Service passive band at 1400–1427 MHz. Since its launch in November 2009, SMOS images have been strongly impacted by Radio Frequency Interference (RFI). So far approximately 500 RFI sources distributed worldwide have been detected. Some of the strongest RFI sources might mask other weaker RFI underneath, hence it is expected the total number of RFI detected may increase as strong ones are progressively located and switched off. Most RFIs are located in Asia and Europe, which together hold approximately 80% of the active sources and more than 90% of the strongest interference. The areas affected by RFI may experience either an underestimation in the retrieval values of soil moisture and ocean salinity or data loss, with the associated detrimental impact in the scientific return. ESA and the teams participating in SMOS mission have put in place different strategies to alleviate this RF interference situation. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
Databáze: Complementary Index