English
DTU.dk
Indeks
Kontakt
Telefonbog
Alumnenetværk
Portalen
Om dette websted
Søgeord
Home
Wind maps from satellite
Wind maps from satellite
Wind fields from satellite
ENVISAT
Synthetic aperture radar
Geophysical model functions
What can we see?
Print
Synthetic aperture radar
A synthetic aperture radar (SAR) is an active microwave sensor capable of imaging the amount of backscattered signal per unit area - the normalized radar cross section (NRCS). NRCS depends on the size and geometry of roughness elements on the scale of the radar wavelength at the Earth surface.
Over a calm ocean surface, the returned NRCS is limited because radar pulses are reflected away from the SAR at an angle equal to the angle of incidence. As the wind picks up, roughness in the form of capillary and short-gravity waves is generated by the surface wind stress. The dominant scattering mechanism is then diffuse and known as Bragg scattering. The relation of NRCS to the local wind speed and direction and to the radar viewing geometry forms the key principle in ocean wind retrievals from SAR.
Siden er opdateret af
---
04.11.2009
Risø
/
Erhvervskontakt
/
Produkter og services
/
Software & data
/
Vindkort fra satellit
/
Synthetic aperture radar
Merete Badger
Seniorforsker
Vindenergi (VEA)
Dir tel 46775002
---
Frederiksborgvej 399
·
Postboks 49
·
4000 Roskilde
·
risoe@risoe.dtu.dk
·
Tel: 4677 4677
·
Fax: 4677 5688