This paper presents the first experimental evidence that the polarimetric brightness temperatures of sea surfaces are sensitive to ocean wind direction in the incidence angle range of 30 to 50 degrees. Our experimental data were collected by a K-band (19.35 GHz) polarimetric wind radiometer (WINDRAD) mounted on the NASA DC-8 aircraft. A set of aircraft radiometer flights was successfully completed in November 1993. We performed circle flights over National Data Buoy Center (NDBC) moored buoys deployed off the northern California coast, which provided ocean wind measurements. The first WINDRAD flight was made on November 4, 1993. There was clear weather with a wind speed of 12 m/s at 330 degrees around the Pt. Arena buoy. We circled the buoy...
Surface wind vector measurements over the oceans are vital for scientists and forecasters to underst...
Airborne microwave radiometer measurements of thermal radiances over sea surface
Foam on the ocean surface significantly increases the brightness temperatures measured by microwave ...
There are numerous applications for airborne imaging systems in remote sensing, and this thesis deal...
Abstract—We analyze the wind direction signal for vertically ( ) and horizontally ( ) polarized micr...
Ocean surface wind vectors over the ocean present vital information for scientists and forecasters i...
L-band brightness temperature of the sea surface as a function of wind speed was studied only in a f...
WindSat, the first polarimetric microwave radiometer on orbit, and the NPOESS Conical Microwave Imag...
The emissivity of sea ice and atmospheric precipitation was investigated. Using the above physics, t...
The author has identified the following significant results. There were a total of twenty-six passes...
A mathematical model is developed for the apparent temperature of the sea at all microwave frequenci...
The Ka-band Conically-Scanning, Two-Look, Airborne Microwave Radiometer (C-STAR) was developed by th...
Wind direction over the sea can be determined from radiometric measurements of the third Stokes para...
A new microwave radiative transfer ocean surface emissivity model for horizontal and vertical polari...
airborne field campaign using the Passive Active L-band System (PALS) and the Ku-band Polarimetric S...
Surface wind vector measurements over the oceans are vital for scientists and forecasters to underst...
Airborne microwave radiometer measurements of thermal radiances over sea surface
Foam on the ocean surface significantly increases the brightness temperatures measured by microwave ...
There are numerous applications for airborne imaging systems in remote sensing, and this thesis deal...
Abstract—We analyze the wind direction signal for vertically ( ) and horizontally ( ) polarized micr...
Ocean surface wind vectors over the ocean present vital information for scientists and forecasters i...
L-band brightness temperature of the sea surface as a function of wind speed was studied only in a f...
WindSat, the first polarimetric microwave radiometer on orbit, and the NPOESS Conical Microwave Imag...
The emissivity of sea ice and atmospheric precipitation was investigated. Using the above physics, t...
The author has identified the following significant results. There were a total of twenty-six passes...
A mathematical model is developed for the apparent temperature of the sea at all microwave frequenci...
The Ka-band Conically-Scanning, Two-Look, Airborne Microwave Radiometer (C-STAR) was developed by th...
Wind direction over the sea can be determined from radiometric measurements of the third Stokes para...
A new microwave radiative transfer ocean surface emissivity model for horizontal and vertical polari...
airborne field campaign using the Passive Active L-band System (PALS) and the Ku-band Polarimetric S...
Surface wind vector measurements over the oceans are vital for scientists and forecasters to underst...
Airborne microwave radiometer measurements of thermal radiances over sea surface
Foam on the ocean surface significantly increases the brightness temperatures measured by microwave ...