Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites

Includes bibliographical references (p. 134-176) === Given that South Africa is an emerging space nation, in a continent of emerging space nations and economies, several technologies need to be developed to progress the space program into a viable and sustainable endeavour. The three main areas of s...

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Main Author: Calder-Potts, George
Other Authors: Inggs, Michael
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10210
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-102102020-10-06T05:11:18Z Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites Calder-Potts, George Inggs, Michael Dunsby, Peter K S Applied Mathematics Includes bibliographical references (p. 134-176) Given that South Africa is an emerging space nation, in a continent of emerging space nations and economies, several technologies need to be developed to progress the space program into a viable and sustainable endeavour. The three main areas of space technology are communications, navigation and remote sensing. Earth science is strongly reliant on the third of these areas for obtaining global scientific data, on a suitable temporal/spatial scale. One of the forms of electro-magnetic remote sensing is microwave radiometry. This dissertation presents a short review of currently available space-faring radiometer technologies and applications, which are then discussed in the context of today's South Africa. For instance Passive Microwave Radiometers (PMR) in the L-Band have huge implications in Soil Moisture (SM) and Sea Salinity (SSS), which in turn affect the global climate, and are being investigated by current and soon to launch missions such as Aquarius, SMOS and SMAP. Multi-frequency radiometers are used to classify various other aspects of Earth's surface-atmosphere system. The structure of this dissertation is to introduce the concepts of radiometry with a review of current and future radiometers from literature (up to November 2011). The user communities, current and possible, are also analysed. There is a discussion of South Africa's history, needs and presence in space, along with possible constraints on a future South African instrument going to space. A technology demonstrator passive microwave radiometer, for SM and Sea Surface Temperature (SST) along with some atmospheric correction channels, is presented. Synergy with data obtained from other instruments, such as an Infra-Red (IR) sounder, is also discussed. 2014-12-27T14:04:34Z 2014-12-27T14:04:34Z 2012 Master Thesis Masters MSc http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10210 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Science Department of Mathematics and Applied Mathematics
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Applied Mathematics
spellingShingle Applied Mathematics
Calder-Potts, George
Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites
description Includes bibliographical references (p. 134-176) === Given that South Africa is an emerging space nation, in a continent of emerging space nations and economies, several technologies need to be developed to progress the space program into a viable and sustainable endeavour. The three main areas of space technology are communications, navigation and remote sensing. Earth science is strongly reliant on the third of these areas for obtaining global scientific data, on a suitable temporal/spatial scale. One of the forms of electro-magnetic remote sensing is microwave radiometry. This dissertation presents a short review of currently available space-faring radiometer technologies and applications, which are then discussed in the context of today's South Africa. For instance Passive Microwave Radiometers (PMR) in the L-Band have huge implications in Soil Moisture (SM) and Sea Salinity (SSS), which in turn affect the global climate, and are being investigated by current and soon to launch missions such as Aquarius, SMOS and SMAP. Multi-frequency radiometers are used to classify various other aspects of Earth's surface-atmosphere system. The structure of this dissertation is to introduce the concepts of radiometry with a review of current and future radiometers from literature (up to November 2011). The user communities, current and possible, are also analysed. There is a discussion of South Africa's history, needs and presence in space, along with possible constraints on a future South African instrument going to space. A technology demonstrator passive microwave radiometer, for SM and Sea Surface Temperature (SST) along with some atmospheric correction channels, is presented. Synergy with data obtained from other instruments, such as an Infra-Red (IR) sounder, is also discussed.
author2 Inggs, Michael
author_facet Inggs, Michael
Calder-Potts, George
author Calder-Potts, George
author_sort Calder-Potts, George
title Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites
title_short Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites
title_full Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites
title_fullStr Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites
title_full_unstemmed Review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future South African satellites
title_sort review of current radiometer technology with suggestions for future south african satellites
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/10210
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