The effect of wind on the microwave emission from the ocean's surface at 37 GHz
Abstract
The microwave brightness temperature measurements from the Electrically Scanned Microwave Radiometer (frequency = 37 GHz) are compared with oceanic wind measurements from data buoys. It is shown that the brightness temperature can be manipulated to yield a measure of the surface roughening which can be very well accounted for by a simple geometric optics model. The data of 1.4, 8.36 and 19.34 GHz were similarly manipulated and shown to require a surface with less slope variance than predicted by optical measurements. It is also shown that the surface may be treated as isotropic to an accuracy equivalent to the roughening produced by a 2 m/s wind speed increment.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- July 1978
- Bibcode:
- 1978STIN...7830480W
- Keywords:
-
- Microwave Emission;
- Ocean Surface;
- Wind Effects;
- Brightness Temperature;
- Nimbus 6 Satellite;
- Sea Roughness;
- Wind Measurement;
- Wind Velocity;
- Communications and Radar