Title: Surface Water ESSP Mission Radar Options
1Surface Water ESSP Mission Radar Options
- E. Rodriguez, D. Moller, P.S. Callahan, Y. Kim
- Jet Propulsion Laboratory
- California Institute of Technology
2Introduction
- Science Requirements
- Mission Design Process
- Measurement Concepts
- Space/Time Coverage Study
- Instrument Concepts and Measurement Accuracy
- Summary and Recommendations
3ESSP and Science Requirements
- ESSPs need to have compelling, clear Science
Goals and Objectives - Hornerberger Report Science Questions
- What are the underlying causes of variation in
the water cycle on both global and regional
scales, and to what extent is this variation
induced by human activity? - To what extent are variations in the global and
regional water cycle predictable? - How will variability and changes in the cycling
of water though terrestrial and freshwater
ecosystems be linked to variability and changes
in the cycling of carbon, nitrogen and other
nutrients at regional and global scales? - Measurement requirements directly related to
science objectives - May have levels at which baseline science is
accomplished and goals for improved science - Tradeoffs, interplay between science goals and
achievable mission, measurement
4Science Requirements
- 5-10 cm height accuracy (need height change for
storage change, not absolute height) - River discharge, wetland/lake storage change
- Map rivers gt 100m width
- Would like to go to smaller rivers
- River slope measurement accuracy 10 mrad
(1cm/1km for Amazon) - River discharge
- Revisit time
- Ideal 3 days in the Arctic, 7 days in the
tropics - Acceptable 7 days in the arctic, 21 days in the
tropics - Imager with resolution better than 100 m
- River width, wetland/lake extent
- Should distinguish vegetated/non-vegetated
- Global coverage, sampling all major contributors
to surface water, is not affected by clouds - Wetlands, rivers, lakes in tropics, Arctic thaw
5Mission Design Process
- Select orbit to optimize temporal/spatial
coverage - Select frequency to reduce errors and cost
- Optimize instrument design
- Derive instrument performance
- Compare instruments
- Spacecraft accommodation
- Launch vehicle selection
- End to End data flow
- Mission Operations
- Cost mission
- The presentation below will follow the blue steps
in order (and briefly mention the last step)
6JPL Experience with ESSP
- JPL has participated in 5 winning ESSP missions
(3 radar missions) - GRACE
- Cloudsat Cloud profiling radar
- OCO Orbiting Carbon Observatory
- Aquarius Ocean salinity radar/radiometer
- Hydros Soil moisture radar/radiometer
- The ESSP process requires a complex trade-off
between science requirements, mission design,
instrument design and performance analysis,
partnering, and cost management
Cloudsat
GRACE
Aquarius
Hydros
OCO
7JPL Experience with Radar Topography
- TOPEX/Poseidon Jason Altimeters sea surface
topography (1992-, 2000-) - Science applications, algorithms, retracking,
ground system, mission management, calibration
and validation - Shuttle Radar Topography Mission land topography
(2000) - Instrument design and manufacture, processing
algorithms, ground system, mission management,
calibration and validation - Ocean Surface Topography Mission Wide-Swath
Ocean Altimeter (2007) - Science applications, instrument design and
manufacture, processing algorithms, ground
system, mission management, calibration and
validation
8Instrument Options
- Tomographic real aperture altimeter optical
imager (Topex/Jason heritage) - Use imager to model returns and generate
space/time templates for parameter fitting - Lowest cost
- Synthetic Aperture Altimeter optical imager
(Delay-Doppler Altimeter SAR heritage) - Uses synthetic aperture altimetry to improve
along-track resolution - No determination of river/wetland extent without
an additional imager - Medium cost
- Near-Nadir Synthetic Aperture Interferometer
(SRTM WSOA heritage) - Combines height determination and imaging in a
single instrument - Height determination and imaging over a large
swath - Higher cost
9Measuring Heights from Ranging
- For all instrument concepts to be examined, the
position vector is given by - P is the platform position , r is the range, and
l is a unit vector in the look direction - In two-dimensions, this becomes
- The difference between measurement techniques is
how r and q are measured, and the spatial
resolution is achieved
10Radar Spatial Resolution
- Conventional real-aperture altimeter spatial
resolution is determined by iso-range annuli and
antenna beamwidth - Left/right/front/back ambiguity
- Pulse limited circle gives geolocation
- Synthetic aperture processing narrows the
along-track (azimuth) cell size - Left/right ambiguity is not resolved
- Clutter from land is reduced
- Interferometer resolves left/right ambiguity by
illuminating only one side of the swath
11Conventional Altimeter Measurement Concept
?
Track Point
- Fit for leading edge center to estimate r(ange)
- Assume that the return comes from the
pulse-limited circle q 0 - This procedure works well for homogeneous
scatterers (large open water bodies, ice) - An alternative concept (tomographic processing)
better suited for rivers will be described below
12Interferometric Measurement Concept
- Conventional altimetry measures a single range
and assumes the return is from the nadir point - For swath coverage, additional information about
the incidence angle is required to geolocate - Interferometry is basically triangulation
- Baseline B forms base (mechanically stable)
- One side, the range, is determined by the system
timing accuracy - The difference between two sides (Dr) is obtained
from the phase difference (F) between the two
radar channels.
F 2p D r/l 2pB sin Q/l h H - r cos Q
13Orbit Selection (1 of 3)
- A sun-synchronous daytime orbit is desired
- Optical imager can only operate in sunlight
- Sun-synchronous orbits significantly simplify
spacecraft design no batteries required, solar
panels only move about one axis - An exact repeat orbit is desired for
- Developing time series, particularly for lakes
- Cal/val by revisiting calibration sites and other
specific instrumentation - Use of waveform templates and other
pre-calculated features - Repeat period needs to meet sampling criteria
- Rapid revisit time to resolve variations (Arctic
thaw, floods) - Dense tracks to hit many lakes, all important
river features - These criteria conflict as 5 day repeat has only
about 70 orbits with gt500 km spacing while lt100
km spacing requires 400 revs or about 30 days.
14Orbit Selection (2 of 3)
- Higher orbit desirable for smaller perturbations,
easier maintenance - Orbit maintenance maneuvers less frequent than
once per week (Operational) and once per repeat
(Accuracy, Operations) - Smaller perturbations (gravity, drag) improve
orbit determination - Reach at least 75 deg latitude to cover Arctic
rivers - Use frozen orbit to maintain low eccentricity and
argument of perigee, ease orbit maintenance
15Orbit Selection (3 of 3)
- TOPEX studies suggestion orbit near 800 km with
inclination 75 deg or 98 deg (Sun sync) with
15-30 day (93-gt186 km) repeat and 6 day
(466 km) subcycle as a good compromise of all
considerations - Need to search for detailed parameters including
frozen orbit - Would need orbit maintenance maneuvers 4 - 40
days, depending on solar cycle activity level and
spacecraft Area/Mass
16Space/Time Coverage Study
- Simulate instrument coverage for two scenarios
- Pulse limited altimeter
- Interferometer with 120 km swath
- Examine space/time observations of rivers and
lakes for different orbit choices - Orbits examined
- ERS-2 Orbit
- 35 day repeat
- 98 degree inclination
- Sun synchronous
- Terra Orbit
- 16 day repeat
- 98 degree inclination
- Sun synchronous
- 10-Day Repeat Orbit
17Surface Water Databases Used
- CIA World Data Bank II
- Rivers examined major rivers, additional major
rivers, other rivers, double-lined rivers - River shape, but no discharge information
- http//www.evl.uic.edu/pape/data/WDB/
- University of New Hampshire Global River
Discharge (Vörösmarty, Fekete, and Tucker) - Time series of river discharge at stations
- Average discharge computed and registered with
CIA river data base - http//www.rivdis.sr.unh.edu/
- University of Hawaii Global Self-Consistent,
Hierarchical, High-Resolution, Shoreline Database
(Wessel and Smith) - Lakes and lake areas
- http//www.soest.hawaii.edu/wessel/gshhs/gshhs.htm
l
18ERS-2 35 Day Repeat Coverage
Global River Coverage Histogram
Global Lake Coverage Histogram
19ERS-2 Visits/Cycle for Major Rivers
20ERS-2 Visits/Cycle for Major Lakes
21Terra 16 Day Repeat Coverage
Global River Coverage Histogram
Global Lake Coverage Histogram
22Terra Visits/Cycle for Major Rivers
23Terra Visits/Cycle for Major Lakes
2410 Day Repeat Coverage
Global River Coverage Histogram
Global Lake Coverage Histogram
2510-Day Repeat Visits/Cycle for Major Rivers
2610-Day Repeat Visits/Cycle for Major Lakes
27Coverage Study Conclusions
- Pulse limited coverage severely undersamples
river and especially lake coverage - 16-day repeat coverage misses 30 of rivers and
70 of lakes in the data bases - If one restricts the study to the largest rivers
and lakes, coverage is much better, but still
misses major rivers and lakes - 16-day repeat coverage misses 14 rivers and 9
lakes in the top 150 (ranked by discharge and
area, respectively) - The rivers which are covered can have only a few
visits per cycle, leading to problems with slope
calculations - A 120 km swath instrument misses very few lakes
or rivers - 1 for 16-day repeat and 7 for 10-day repeat
- A detailed analysis of the science impact of
these results must await the results of the
synthetic mission study results
28Frequency Selection Criteria
- Ionospheric delay correction
- Range resolution
- Cloud/Rain attenuation
- Technology maturity
- Spacecraft accommodation
- Land water separation near nadir, vegetation
penetration
29Ionospheric Delays
- The ionosphere is a dispersive medium which
introduces height errors depending on frequency
and total electron content (TEC) - I16 is the total electron content in units of
1016m-2. It varies between 20 -gt 100. If
uncompensated, this leads to errors between
4cm-gt22cm at Ku-band and 0.7cm -gt 3cm at Ka-band - TOPEX/Jason compensate using Ku/C band altimeters
(additional instrument cost) - In the future, it may be possible to compensate
using GPS derived ionospheric models - Ka-band is preferable if only one frequency is
used
30Range Resolution and Height Accuracy
- Increased range resolution (bandwidth) is desired
- Reduces the size of the pulse limited circle
- Increases height accuracy for altimeter and
interferometers - Increases the spatial resolution of
interferometric images - There is a data rate penalty for increased
resolution - Ku-band bandwidth is limited to 320 MHz (50 cm
range resolution) - Ka-band can be used with bandwidths of 500 MHz
(30 cm range resolution) - Given a fixed interferometric baseline and SNR,
Ka-band will have 2.5X better height accuracy
than Ku-band
31Cloud and Rain Attenuation
- Ku and Ka-band will penetrate clouds
- Ka-band is severely impacted by higher rain rates
- As a worst case 5 to 10 of data might be lost
at Ka-band due to rain (TRMM and scatterometer
data) - Ku band could work for lower rain rates, but rain
distorts the waveform and degrades accuracy.
32Technology Maturity and Spacecraft Accommodation
- Ku-band RF maturity is higher, but Ka-band is
rapidly catching up. - Power sources are available at the desired levels
in both frequencies - For a given beamwidth, Ka-band antennas will be
2.5X smaller than Ku-band antennas, or have 2.5X
better resolution for a given antenna size - For a given height accuracy, the interferometric
baseline will be 2.5X smaller at Ka-band - A 10 m baseline at Ka-band is equivalent to a 70
m baseline at C-band (SRTM baseline 60 m)
33Vegetation Penetration and Land/Water
Discrimination
- Both Ku and Ka bands are highly attenuated by
vegetation - In order to reach the water, near nadir angles
(lt5deg) are required in either case - For both frequencies water is significantly
brighter than land in the near-nadir regime - The water/land contrast is slightly lower at
Ka-band
34Frequency Selection
- For interferometers, Ka-band is probably superior
to Ku-band if sufficient power is available - Smaller baseline and antennas easier to integrate
- For nadir altimeters, Ka-band is better due to
the ionospheric correction, smaller instrument,
and higher spatial and range resolution - CNES has advocated a Ka-band altimeter (AltiKa)
as the next step in nadir altimeter evolution. - Primary drawback of Ka-band rain data loss
35Wet Tropospheric Delays
- Water vapor in the atmosphere causes a range
error which is independent of frequency, for the
frequencies examined. - Ocean altimetry uses a 3-frequency radiometer to
remove wet troposphere delays. - This technique cannot be used over land since the
land brightness temperature changes dominate the
radiometer brightness temperatures. - Examination of wet tropospheric delays over the
ocean and from radiosonde data over land
indicates that the wet troposphere error will
induce a 3cm (1s) height error. - This error is the same for all the instrument
concepts.
36Wet Troposphere Delays Over Land
Source S. Kheim, JPL
37Why Have Conventional Altimeters Been Limited for
River/Wetland Monitoring?
- Onboard tracker
- Solution remove tracker dynamics
- Assumption about river nadir location often
incorrect - Solution use imager for geolocation
- River waveforms do not fit a single return
waveform model - Solution use imager to generate fitting
templates - Fitting of single waveforms has insufficient
information - Solution tomographic processing
- Poor spatial resolution
- Solution use narrower beams, imager, tomographic
processing or SAR processing
38Onboard Tracker
- Onboard range tracker designed for ocean
waveforms. - Tracker often is not locked over land
- Over land, dynamic range window location changes,
coupled with waveform averaging, often distorts
return waveforms so that they are not useful - Solution preprogram range window using SRTM
topography to remove dynamic tracker distortions - Penalty need to use larger range window and
store (or command) global range window position
39The River is Not in the Nadir Location
- If the river is not in the nadir, a range
measurement is insufficient for height
determination - The same range results in two different heights
- Rivers at the same height but different distances
from nadir will also result in different ranges - Additional information is required to be able to
infer height from the range - Need imager to resolve geolocation
r
r
Height error
40Coupling of Geolocation and Height Errors Imager
Requirements
- Position error (and hence optical imager spatial
resolution) has strong impact on height accuracy - In order to meet the height accuracy goals, the
imager resolution must be 10-20 m and the
pointing accuracy lt 5 arcsec - The cost impact of these requirements is
probably not small for an optical imager
41Amazon Simulation to Illustrate Issues
Use water/land JERS SAR classification map to
simulate radar brightness (from S. Saatchi, JPL)
Use SRTM topography to simulate waveform return
times. Topographic variation 300m
42Pass 241 Waveforms
Color indicates return power color scale varies
from purple (lowest power) to red (highest power)
Range Direction
43Why Using the Waveform Alone is not Sufficient
For a single river encounter, waveform shape
changes significantly and the leading edge is not
a good predictor (without geolocation
information) of the height of the river.
44Altimeter Instrument Concept
- Use Ka-band frequency (8 mm wavelength)
- 1.5 m reflector antenna gt 4.3 km beam limited
footprint - 500 MHz bandwidth (30 cm range resolution) gt 650
m pulse limited footprint - Use preset tracker based on known topography
- Reduce number of onboard averaging to minimize
distortion - Use full-deramp processing to reduce data rate
- For SAR mode, use bursts to reduce PRF, and
onboard SAR compression (e.g., K. Raneys
delay-doppler) - Required transmit power (10W) available from
solid-state technology - SAR mode requires onboard processor, higher
complexity and digital subsystem power
45What is the Precision of Altimeter Heights?
- The range resolution for all radar altimeters is
much coarser than the estimated height precision - Example Topex range resolution 50 cm. Height
precision 2 cm - The reason this can be achieved is that a priori
information can be used to constrain the height
inversion - Example for ocean altimetry, the Brown waveform
model reduces the estimation to fitting 5
parameters - For rivers, there is no universal parametric
model which can be used for inversion - The solution use imager water delineation and
land topography to create templates for waveform
fitting - The accuracy of the estimated height must be
assessed for each crossing geometry
46Large River Crossing Waveforms
47Smaller River Crossing Waveforms
48Tomographic Height Estimation
- Use entire range/time power history instead of
single waveforms - Use imager to obtain water mask and geolocation
- Generate simulated waveform templates and
optimize fit with data by varying river height
and reflectivity - The problem can be recast as a Maximum Likelihood
or MAP estimation problem for a limited set of
model parameters - Formal estimates of measurement errors can be
obtained by error propagation
49Tomographic Estimation Height Error
- If template is close enough to the true
waveform, the difference can be written as - The parameters can be ML estimated by minimizing
- The estimation error follows by error
propagation. In the case of a single parameter
(optimistic estimate)
50Large River Waveform Height Derivatives
SAR Altimeter Waveform Height Derivatives
Nadir Track
Range Direction
Interferometer River Image
RAR Altimeter Waveforms Height Derivatives
51Smaller River Waveform Height Derivatives
SAR Altimeter Waveform Height Derivatives
Nadir Track
Range Direction
Interferometer River Image
RAR Altimeter Waveform Height Derivatives
52Predicted Height Precision
- Predicted precision optimistic because only 1
parameter is estimated (results indicative) - Accuracy will be dominated by modeling errors
(water mask, brightness, and location) and
tropospheric delays - Both real aperture and synthetic aperture
altimeters will meet the precision goals.
53Surface Water Interferometer Concept
- Ka-band SAR interferometric system with 2 swaths,
50 km each - Produces heights and co-registered all-weather
imagery - 200 MHz bandwidth (0.75 cm range resolution)
- Use near-nadir returns for SAR altimeter/angle of
arrival mode (e.g. Cryosat SIRAL mode) to fill
swath - No data compression onboard data downlinked to
NOAA Ka-band ground stations
54Simulated Interferometer Return
The interferometer return signal contains both
radar brightness (for water boundary delineation)
and phase (color) for height estimation Image
geolocation accuracy given by timing accuracy,
not platform attitude, unlike optical imager
55Interferometric Error Budget Dominant Contributors
Orbit Error
Media Delay Error (Iono, Tropo)
Phase Error
Baseline Roll Error
Other error sources (e.g., baseline length, yaw
errors) can be controlled so that errors are
smaller by an order of magnitude, or more.
56Interferometric Phase Error
dh l r tan Q/(2 p B) dF
- For incidence angles considered, a roll error
and a phase error are indistinguishable
- Sources of phase noise
- Thermal noise in radar signal (random)
- Decorrelation of the two returns due to speckle
decorrelation of scattered fields (random) - Phase imbalance between the two interferometric
channels - Temperature driven (slow change)
- Can be calibrated using calibration loop.
57Interferometer Height and Slope Precision
Height and slope estimates are made by using
radar image to isolate water body and fitting a
best fit linear height change over the
swath. Precision depends on water brightness and
the length and width of the imaged water body
58Assumed Water Sigma0
Sigma0 derived from Geometric Optics prediction
and Fresnel reflection coefficient
59Histogram of River Lengths in Swath
60Baseline Roll Error
- dh r sin Q d Q??? C d Q
- An error in the baseline roll angle tilts the
surface by the same angle. - As an order of magnitude, a 0.1arcsec roll error
results in a 2.2cm height error at 50km from the
nadir point - Roll knowledge error sources
- Errors in spacecraft roll estimate
- Mechanical distortion of the baseline (can be
made negligible if the baseline is rigid enough)
C
61Removing Roll Error by Using SRTM
- Roll errors produce long-wavelength across-track
tilts - It is not yet feasible to have star trackers with
sufficient accuracy to guarantee cm level
accuracy - Adjust cross-track tilts to match reference
topographic map (e.g., SRTM) for long wavelength
land heights and slopes - Removes long-wavelength errors to cm accuracy
- Loses absolute height information tracks storage
changes, rather than absolute height (consistent
with science goals) - Removes long wavelength tropospheric errors
- Potential issue seasonal variations of height
due to vegetation at higher latitudes - Make adjustments based on non-vegetated regions
- Make cross-over adjustments using data near in
time ocean calibration (SRTM algorithms) - Derive height correction based on mean height
changes between vegetated and non-vegetated
regions
62Interferometer Instrument Heritage
- SRTM--First spaceborne radar interferometry
mission (2000) - Absolute height accuracy 6m (90) at 30m
spatial posting
Wide-Swath Ocean Altimeter
- Wide-Swath Ocean Altimeter (WSOA)
- Experimental demonstration as part of the OSTM
mission - WSOA has successfully passed a Preliminary Design
Review - Technology maturity and feasibility demonstrated
- Ku-band (2.5 cm) real aperture radar
interferometer. Applicable Technologies
Ultra-stable mast (SRTM heritage) reflectarray
antennas RF receive chain design - Required Ka-band tube exists, but is not space
qualified
63Instrument Options Summary
- The 3 designs considered are technologically
mature and ready for an ESSP proposal - The interferometer option gives significantly
better performance and coverage than either of
the altimeter options - The altimeter options have poor space/time
coverage of rivers and lakes slope measurement
problematic - Height estimation using the real or synthetic
aperture altimeters needs to be coupled to an
optical imager in order to remove geolocation
errors - The cost of acquiring an optical instrument with
the desired accuracy remains to be studied - The performance of the altimeter options is hard
to quantify when the water body does not cover
the footprint performance depends on river
geometry and imager capabilities and needs to be
studied further - The RAR and SAR instruments may be combined into
a single instrument and the interferometer acts
as an altimeter
64Mission Cost Considerations
- Assume that the ESSP cap slightly higher than
last ESSP (175M) - The altimeter options (without imager) will
probably fit under the cost cap without any
partners - However, imager cost is an unknown, at this point
- The interferometer option will probably need a
partner to fit under the cost cap - Potential collaboration ESA explorer coordinated
proposal, other space agencies - The interferometer option has the potential of
meeting additional science objectives - Sea ice thickness
- Ocean mesoscale variability
- Ocean coastal coverage
- Next generation topography maps
65Recommendations
- Since interferometer option offers significant
advantages over nadir altimeters, examine
partnering options in the near future - Nadir altimeter options have significant
questions which must be answered prior to
proposal - Space/time coverage impact
- Imager requirements
- Refinement of height error budget
- Two tasks are ongoing to resolve these issues
- NASA synthetic hydrology mission study
- JPL approved internal funding for surface water
radar instrument trade-offs - In order to select the instrument properly, we
should complete these studies and the
investigation of foreign collaboration