Description and overview of an instrument designed to measure line-of-sight delay due to water vapor
Abstract
Eight dual channel microwave radiometers were constructed as a research and development effort for the Crustal Dynamics Project and the Deep Space Network. These instruments, known as water vapor radiometers, are primarily intended to demonstrate that the variable path delay imposed by atmospheric water vapor can be calibrated in microwave tracking and distance measuring systems but could also be used in other applications involving moist air meteorology and propagation studies. They are being deployed to various stations and observatories that participate in Very Long Baseline Interferometry experiments. The development history of these instruments are reviewed, the theory of operation and overall design considerations are outlined, and the instrumental parameters and performance characteristics are described.
- Publication:
-
The Telecommunications and Data Acquisition Report
- Pub Date:
- February 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983tdar.nasa....1R
- Keywords:
-
- Atmospheric Moisture;
- Line Of Sight;
- Microwave Radiometers;
- Very Long Base Interferometry;
- Water Vapor;
- Bandwidth;
- Brightness Temperature;
- Calibrating;
- Electronic Modules;
- Frequency Ranges;
- Temperature Control;
- Instrumentation and Photography