Smap Microwave Radiometer Calibration Revisit Approaches and Performamnce

2020 
The SMAP L-band microwave radiometer is in its extended mission of measuring soil moisture and freeze/thaw state globally for quantifying the water and carbon cycles. Instrument behavior has been stable over the past 4 years and 9 months. With the concurrent calibration of the internal calibration parameters and the antenna gain after estimating reflector emissivity, the SMAP radiometer measurements exhibit 0.1 K (rms) stability and nearly zero biases over the averaged global ocean and monthly Cold Sky views. The data (version 4) were released to the public in 2018 for various science activities. Now the radiometer data are under revisit to improve the absolute radiometric calibration and reduce calibration drift. Several approaches are investigated to obtain the optimal solution. In addition, the correction to the radiometer measurement when the SMAP radar transmitter was operational will also be revisited for the next data release. The performances of the calibration revisit and Radio-Frequency Interference (RFI) trends will be presented as well.
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