Title: Hurricane Observation Capability of Future Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD)
1- Hurricane Observation Capability of Future
Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD)
Timothy L. Miller1, R. Atlas2, P. G. Black3, R.
E. Hood5, M. W. James1, J. W. Johnson6, L.
Jones6, C. S. Ruf7, E. W. Uhlhorn2, and Salem
Al-Nimri6 1NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL 2NOAA/AOML,
Miami, FL 3SAIC Inc., Naval Research Laboratory,
Monterey, CA 4USRA, Marshall Space Flight Ctr,
Huntsville, AL 5NOAA, Boulder, CO 6University of
Central Florida, Orlando, FL 7University of
Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI
Presented to Interdepartmental Hurricane
Conference, March 2009
2Hurricane Imaging Radiometer (HIRAD)
- HIRAD utilizes NASA Instrument Incubator
Technology - Provides unique observations of sea surface
wind, temp and rain - Advances understanding / prediction of hurricane
intensity - Expands Stepped Frequency Microwave Radiometer
capabilities - Uses synthetic thinned array, RFI mitigation
technology of Lightweight Rain Radiometer
Existing 1980s Technology
Simulated Observations
Advanced Technology HIRAD in development
Government, Academic Team
- Timothy Miller, PI, NASA/MSFC Earth Science
- Eric Uhlhorn, co-PI, NOAA AOML/Hurricane
Research Division - Robbie Hood, NOAA UAV Program Mgr, co-I and
former PI - Linwood Jones, University of Central Florida
- Christopher Ruf, University of Michigan
- NASA/UAH Engineering Spacecraft Project
Management - Peter Black, NRL/SAIC
- Robert Atlas, NOAA/AOML
2000 km Swath
70 km
- Passive Microwave C-Band Radiometer
- Freq 4, 5, 6 6.6 GHz, Version 1 H-pol for
ocean wind speed, Version 2 fully polarimetric
for ocean wind vectors - 20 km Aircraft Altitude Performance
Characteristics - EIA 0- 60, Spatial Resolution 2-5 km, Swath
70 km - Observational Goals
- Wind Speed 10 - gt85 m/s Rain Rate 0 - gt 100
mm/hr
3What is HIRAD?(Hurricane Imaging Radiometer)
- Passive C-band radiometer
- Objective To measure strong ocean surface winds
through heavy rain from air or space-based
platform - With cross-track resolution in addition to
along-track - Swath width 60o (3 x altitude)
- Winds dynamic range 10 100 m/s, through rain
up to 100 mm/hr - Would complement scatterometers and lidars
- Technology heritage
- SFMR (Stepped-Frequency Microwave Radiometer)
currently flying on reconnaissance aircraft (no
cross-track resolution) - NASA Instrument Incubator Thinned array
antenna, along-track real aperture, synthetic
cross-track aperture - Status
- Brassboard (bench lab) version of
single-polarization (wind speed only) instrument
successfully tested in anechoic chamber last
August - Single-polarization aircraft instrument to be
completed Sept. 2009 - Partnership
- Project leadership, PI, and engineering at
NASA/MSFC - Technology, engineering, and science lead
partners NOAA/HRD (Uhlhorn), Univ. Central
Florida (Linwood Jones), Univ. Michigan (Chris
Ruf), Univ. Alabama Huntsville (project
engineering support)