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A Sparse Synthetic Aperture Radiometer Constellation Concept for Remote Sensing of Antarctic Ice Sheet Temperature
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2025
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Source: IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, vol. 63, pp. 1-21, 2025, Art no. 5300421
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Journal Title:IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing
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Description:We present a concept for UHF/L-band (0.5–2 GHz) remote sensing of Antarctic ice sheet internal temperature using a highly sparse synthetic aperture radiometer constellation. This concept leverages the relative stability of ice sheet thermal emission over long temporal periods to gradually assemble a collection of array baselines which are jointly transformed to develop large image facets. We formulate a calculation of minimum array complexity based on the desired sensitivity, spatial resolution, and time available for observations. We determine from this calculation that such a system can achieve 1–10-km spatial resolution (significantly finer than the program of record) over monthly to yearly timescales with as few as 10–20 elements; even fewer elements are required for observing only the ice sheet center. The inverse problem of reconstructing image facets from mixed-pointing and mixed-configuration observations is posed using a Fourier domain data constraint with a total variational regularization in the image domain. This approach enables image formation from heterogeneous observations while mitigating artifacts. We present a notional constellation design for three satellites which could accomplish the necessary baseline sampling by rotating the phase and semimajor axis of spacecraft relative positions in planar circular orbits (PCOs). We demonstrate image formation by observing system simulations leveraging predictions of Antarctica’s multiwavelength brightness temperature computed from ice sheet thermomechanical and radiative transfer models.
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Source:IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing, vol. 63, pp. 1-21, 2025, Art no. 5300421
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Rights Information:CC BY
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