Climate-quality calibration for low earth-orbit microwave radiometry

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Abstract

Improvements in radiometric calibration are needed to achieve the desired accuracy and stability of satellite-based microwave-radiometer observations intended for the production of climate data records. Linearity, stability and traceability of measurements to an SI-unit standard should be emphasized. We suggest radiometer design approaches to achieve these objectives in a microwave calibration-reference instrument. Multi-year stability would be verified by comparison to radio-occultation measurements. Data from such an instrument could be used for climate studies and also to transfer its calibration to weather-satellite instruments. With the suitable selection of an orbit, a climatology of the diurnal variation in the measured parameters could be compiled, which would reduce uncertainties in climate trends inferred from earlier microwave radiometers over past decades.

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Rosenkranz, P. W., Blackwell, W. J., & Leslie, R. V. (2020). Climate-quality calibration for low earth-orbit microwave radiometry. Remote Sensing, 12(2). https://doi.org/10.3390/rs12020241

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