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Passive Remote Sensing: allocations, sensors, measurements and applications NASA HQ Spectrum Management Office REMOTE SENSING WORKSHOP.

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Presentation on theme: "Passive Remote Sensing: allocations, sensors, measurements and applications NASA HQ Spectrum Management Office REMOTE SENSING WORKSHOP."— Presentation transcript:

1 Passive Remote Sensing: allocations, sensors, measurements and applications Thomas.vonDeak@nasa.gov NASA HQ Spectrum Management Office REMOTE SENSING WORKSHOP Geneva, Switzerland 11 December 2007

2 Passive Sensing  Radio Regulation No. 1.183 (definition)  Passive Sensor: A measuring instrument in the earth exploration- satellite service or in the space research service by means of which information is obtained by reception of radio waves of natural origin. Radio waves of natural origin are emissions from the ground, air, and water. All objects emit radio waves and the emissions convey information about those objects.

3 Remote sensing is a layered system

4 The complete remote sensing system addresses societal concerns

5  Passive sensors are designed to receive and measure natural emissions produced by the Earth’s surface and its atmosphere. The frequency and strength of these natural emissions characterize the type and status of many important geophysical, which describe the status of the Earth/Atmosphere/Oceans System:  Earth surface parameters such as soil moisture, sea surface temperature, ice extension and age, snow cover, rainfall over land, etc... ;  Three-dimensional atmospheric parameters (low, medium, and upper atmosphere) such as wind circulation, temperature profiles, water vapour content and concentration profiles of radiatively and chemically important trace gazes (for instance O3, SO2 and ClO). Use of the Passive Bands

6  Microwave observations at frequencies below 100 GHz enable studies of the Earth’s surface and its atmosphere from spaceborne instruments even in the presence of clouds, because clouds are almost transparent at these frequencies. This "all-weather" observing capability has been very important for EESS in achieving the repetitive global coverage mandatory for meteorological, climatological, and environmental monitoring and surveying.  The impressive progress made in recent years in weather analysis, warning and forecasts, especially for dangerous weather phenomena that affect all populations and economies is largely attributable to the spaceborne observations and their assimilation in numerical models.  Play a major role in the prediction and detection of disasters. Use of the Passive Bands

7 Typical bands and their main application:  1400-1427 MHz: salinity (ocean), soil moisture (ground)  10.6-10.7 MHz: rain, snow, ice, sea state, ocean wind  23.6-24 GHz: total content of water vapour  31.3-31.5 GHz: the lowest cumulated effects due to oxygen and water vapour in the vicinity of the 50 GHz band. Optimum window channel to see the Earth’s surface: reference for the other channels.  36-37 GHz: cloud liquid water, vegetation structure, surface roughness  50.2-50.4 GHz: temperature profile Use of the Passive Bands

8 Passive Sensors observe through the atmosphere

9 Sensitivity of Brightness Temperature to Geophysical Parameters over Land Surface

10 Microwave and Millimeter-wave Spectrum Spectral Sensitivity to Environmental Parameters: Ocean Scene

11 Aqua Instruments – AMSR-E  Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer for EOS  12-Channels, 6 frequencies 6.9-89.0 GHz  dual-polarization  5.4-56 km footprint at nadir  All weather

12 AMSR-E Products  Precipitation Rate  Cloud Water  Surface wind speed over oceans  Sea Surface Temperature  Ice, Snow and Soil Moisture

13 Aqua Instruments – AMSU/A Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit 15 Microwave Channels 15-90 GHz 15 Microwave Channels 15-90 GHz ~40 km footprint at nadir ~40 km footprint at nadir All-Weather All-Weather

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15 Global composite of brightness temperature (K) From AMSU-A Channel 3

16 Radiation Measurements to Vertical Soundings  AIRS and AMSU data combined to create vertical soundings of temperature and humidity  Air and/or water vapor at various heights (pressures) contribute to the total radiation measurement viewed from space.  The contribution peaks at different pressures for different wavelengths

17 Improve Accuracy of Severe Weather Warnings Microwave Imagery and Sounding products improve prediction of precipitation, surface wind speed and direction Increase in hurricane landfall forecast skill saves an estimated $1 million per mile of coastline that does not have to be evacuated Improved observations yield improved early warnings, which in turn mitigate the devastating effects of floods through disaster planning and response

18 Earthquake prediction Floods Hurricane & Typhoons Land Surface Topography Global Precipitation Ocean Surface Winds Surface Deformation Motions of the Earth’s Interior Disaster Management Data DECISION SUPPORT TOOLS Observations VALUE & BENEFITS EARTH SYSTEM MODELS EARTH OBSERVATORIES Predictions *Future Mission *Supported Non-NASA Model Land: Landsat, SRTM, GPS, SCIGN, Terra, Aqua Ocean: QuickSCAT, Seawinds, IceSAT, GOES, POES, SSMI, JASON, TOPEX/POSEIDON Atmosphere: TRMM, GOES, POES, GPM, NPP, NPOESS Earthquake: MMI, Quakesim Hurricane: HURRSIM Flood: SLOSH, WAVEwatch, STWAVE, HURSURGE Land: GPS Network, SBEACH Building Cost Models: ATC-13 Building Structure Models: EPEDAT Identify/ Prioritize high-risk communities Reduction in lives lost Reduction in damage cost Anticipate the scope of disaster-related damage Improve disaster response Community Planning Disaster Recovery/ Mitigation Land use decision Potential economic loss Estimation of direct damage, induced damage, direct losses, and indirect losses Accurate risk prediction to communities Loss estimates of buildings, essential facilities, transportation & utility lifelines, and population Social impacts HAZUS-MH (Hazards U.S. - Multi Hazard)

19 Disaster Related Remote Sensing Applications  Weather Prediction: a key input to numerical weather prediction models used globally for weather forecasting. (Microwave(passive))  Global Warming: concentrations and distributions of atmospheric gases, sea and land ice thickness and change, and ozone measurements are key components to studying and prediction of global warming. (Microwave(passive), Infrared)  Severe Weather Events: the prediction of severe weather events requires accurate measurements of rain rates in storms over the oceans which is only possible with remote sensing satellites. (Microwave(passive))  Forest Fires: detection of fires through smoke by their microwave radiation. (Infrared)

20 Key Applications (continued)  Management of Natural Resources: measurements of biomass, deforestation, and water resources through systematic environmental monitoring. (Microwave (passive), Infrared, Optical)  Volcanoes: used to detect volcanic activity even before eruptions and to track and predict the volcanic fallout effects. (Optical, Microwave (active), Infrared, SubM)  Shipping: used to track sea ice, ice floes, and ocean storms to steer ships out of harm’s way. (Optical, MW(active))  Long Range Climate Forecasts: study of global atmospheric and oceanic events such as El Niño requires sea surface temperature, ocean winds, ocean wave height, and many other components used in the prediction of long range weather forecasting and climatic trends. (Microwave (active/passive))

21 Remote Sensing Report –ITU-D SG 2 Question 22/2 “ Utilization of ICT for disaster management, resources, and active and passive space-based sensing systems as they apply to disaster and emergency relief situations ” Work Item 2:Identification and examination of active and passive sensing system applications for their potential effect in enhancing disaster mitigation.Work Item 2:Identification and examination of active and passive sensing system applications for their potential effect in enhancing disaster mitigation. Version 1 of the Report is complete and available upon request from the presenter.

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23 THANK YOU! Thomas vonDeak NASA HQ Spectrum Management Office (VIEWS EXPRESSED ARE THOSE OF THE PRESENTER AND DO NOT NECESSARILY REFLECT THOSE OF NASA.)

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25 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov Global Passive Sensor Systems AQUARIUSAquarius is a focused satellite mission to measure global Sea Surface Sainity. Aquarius will resolve missing physical processes that link the water cycle, the climate, and the ocean. AQUAAqua, collects information on the Earth’s water cycle. The AMSR-E instrument observes atmospheric, lad, oceanic, and cryospheric parameters, including precipitation, sea surface temperatures, ice concentrations, snow water equivalent, surface wetness, wind speed, atmospheric cloud water, and water vapor. The AMSU instrument is a 15-channel microwave sounder designed primarily to obtain temperature profiles in the upper atmosphere (especially the stratosphere) and to provide a cloud-filtering capability for tropospheric temperature observations. CORIOLISCoriolis is a 3-year meteorological science mission to demonstrate the viability of using polarimetry to measure ocean surface wind speed and direction from space, and to demonstrate predictions of geomagnetic disturbances through continuous observation of Coronal Mass Ejections. It’s WinSat instrument is a passive polarimetric microwave radiometer developed as a risk reduction item in the development of the planned production Conial Microwave Imager Sounder. DMSPThe Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) monitors the meteorological, oceanographic, and solar-terrestrial physics environments. The SSM/I instrument is a seven-channel, four frequency, linearly-polarize, passive microwave radiometric system whose data is sued to obtain synoptic maps of critical atmospheric, oceanographic and selected land parameters on a global scale. The SSM/T instrument is a five channel, total power microwave radiometer designed to provide global monitoring of the concentration of water vapor in the atmosphere under all sky conditions.

26 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov Global Passive Sensor Systems GCOMJAXA’s Global Change Observation Missions (GCOM) will carry the AMSR2 instrument which is an upgraded version of the AMSR-E instrument on NASA’s AQUA mission. JASONJason-1 is the first satellite in a series designed to ensure continued observation of the oceans for several decades. The JASON-1 Microwave Radiometer (JMR) is a passive sensor which acquires measurements via three separate frequency channels to determine the path delay of the altimeter’s radar signal due to atmospheric water vapor. MEGHA- TROPIQUE Megha-Tropique is designed to investigate the contribution of the water cycle to climate dynamics specifically in the tropical regions. Its Microwave Analysis and Detection of Rain and Atmospheric Structures (MADRAS) passive sensor measures cloud, precipitation and upper atmospheric ice parameters. METEOR-M-1The overall objective of the Meteor-M-1 mission are to provide operational meteorological services. The objective of MTVZA is to monitor ocean and land surfaces as well as global atmospheric parameters such as temperature and water vapor profiles and to obtain sea surface wind profiles. METOPMetOp promises to provide outstanding data sets to advance the filed of meteorology, which will ultimately improve the accuracy of weather forecasting and our understanding of climate change. AMSU-A and AMSU-B passively measure+C17 scene radiance which is used in conjunction with an infrared sounder to calculate the global atmospheric temperature and humidity profiles.

27 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov Global Passive Sensor Systems NOAA (=GOES)The NOAA satellites, more commonly known as the geostationary operational environmental satellites (GOES), are used for short-range warning and “nowcasting” and use a form of the AMSU sensor found on NASA’s AQUA satellite. NPP & NPOESNational Polar-Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS) and its Preparatory Project (NPP) collects and distributes remotely-sensed land, ocean, and atmospheric data to the meteorological and global climate change communities. The Advanced Technology Microwave Sounder (ATMS) passively collects atmospheric data to permit the calculation of temperature and moisture profiles at high (~daily) temporal resolution. OKEAN-1The OKEAN series of satellites provide oceanagraphic monitoring including measurements of arctic ice. Sentinel-3ESA’s Sentinel-3 satellite will be dedicated to providing operational oceanographic services. SMOSESA’s Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS) mission has been designed to observe soil moisture over the Earth’s landmasses and salinity over the oceans. TRMMThe Tropical Rainfall Measuring Mission (TRMM) is a mission designed to monitor and study tropical rainfall. The TRMM Microwave Imager (TMI) is a passive microwave sensor designed to provide quantitative rainfall information over a wide swath under the TRMM satellite.

28 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov 28 Capabilities of Space-Based Sensing Societal Benefit Three: Understanding … climate variability and change.

29 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov 29 Capabilities of Space-Based Sensing Societal Benefit Eight: Improving… terrestrial, coastal, and marine ecosystems..

30 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov 30 Capabilities of Space-Based Sensing Societal Benefit Eight: Improving… terrestrial, coastal, and marine ecosystems..

31 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov 31 Capabilities of Space-Based Sensing Societal Benefit Three: Understanding … climate variability and change.

32 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov 32 Capabilities of Space-Based Sensing Societal Benefit One: Reducing loss of life and property … from disasters.. Prediction

33 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov 33 Capabilities of Space-Based Sensing Societal Benefit One: Reducing loss of life and property … from disasters.. Prediction

34 National Aeronautics and Space Administration www.nasa.gov 34 Capabilities of Space-Based Sensing Societal Benefit One: Reducing loss of life and property … from disasters.. Prediction, Disaster Event Assessment, Monitoring


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