Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8131605 | Advances in Space Research | 2018 | 15 Pages |
Abstract
This article explores the modification and inclusion of different algorithms within an in-house Delay-Doppler Processor (DDP) chain in order to understand their potentiality and the related impact in terms of geophysical retrievals' precision, when operating the synthetic aperture radar (SAR) mode of CryoSat-2 mission over open ocean. To do so, a flexible and tunable processing chain has been developed by isardSAT, being able to accommodate the different algorithms/options. Two different levels of analysis have been carried out. On one hand, the CryoSat-2 nominal SAR processing baseline is compared against the one considered in the state-of-the-art Sentinel-3 ocean topographic mission, and then, against a modified version of CS-2, where the samples set to zero by the processor on the stack are not included in the incoherent averaging. On the other, the integration of an advanced processing at stack level and based on the amplitude compensation and dilation compensation (ACDC) is evaluated within the CryoSat-2 DDP. A comparative study of the different DDP configurations is presented exploiting SAR full bit rate (FBR) data from CryoSat-2 over two regions in the central Pacific Ocean and the Agulhas box. Ad-hoc SAR ocean re-trackers are exploited to derive the geophysical parameters (sea surface height-SSH and significant wave height-SWH), such that the performance of the different baselines can be quantified in terms of precision, i.e., estimation noise.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Space and Planetary Science
Authors
Eduardo Makhoul, Mònica Roca, Chris Ray, Roger Escolà , Albert Garcia-Mondéjar,