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Technology & Operations: Instrument

Aquarius satellite
Schematic drawing of Aquarius instrument
Front view of prototype salinity instrument, PALS (Passive / Active L- and S-band radiometer)
Front view of prototype salinity instrument,
PALS (Passive / Active L- and S-band radiometer)

Aquarius Instrument Information


Item Value
Summary/Units
Sensor type
Radiometers at 1.413 GHz; scatterometer at 1.26 GHz
Number of instruments
1
Number of channels
3 antenna feeds, 3 polarimetric radiometers, 1 polarimetric scatterometer
Size
3 m x 6 m_ 4 m, antenna deployed
Mass with contingency
400 kg
Power with contingency
450 W, 100% duty cycle, 50 W standby
Data rate with contingency
TBD kbps
Optical layout
3 antenna beams at 29°, 38°, 45° incidence angles to shadow side of orbit
Footprint sizes
76 X 94 km, 84 X 120 km, 96 X 156 km
Radiometer NEDT 6 sec integration
0.08 K
Radiometer stability for 7 days
0.12 K
Radar calibration stability for 7 days
0.13 dB
Ground calibration scheme
In situ SSS sensors on buoys and ships
Onorbit calibration scheme
Noise diodes in radiometer and cold sky measurements
Pointing requirements (3s)
0.05 (knowledge); 0.5 (control and stability)
Command and control requirements
Once per month for cold sky measurement
Operational modes
ON, Standby, Survival

Glossary Words
microwave: Electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength of between 0.3 and 30 centimeters (between infrared and radio), corresponding to frequency of 1 to 100 gigahertz (GHz). Favored for radar because of its cloud-penetrating properties.

radiometer: An instrument that measures radiance, or the radiation emitted by an object.

scatterometer: A microwave (radar) sensor that scans the surface of the earth from an aircraft or satellite and reads the reflection or scattering coefficient of the return pulse to measure surface roughness and derive wind speed and direction.


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