A compact 118GHz radiometer for the Micro-sized Microwave Atmospheric Satellite (MicroMAS)1

I. Osaretin, W. Blackwell, G. Allen, S. Conrad, C. Galbraith, R. Leslie, W. Osborn, B. Reid, L. Retherford, M. Scarito, C. Semisch, M. Shields, E. Thompson, D. Toher, D. Townzen, R. Wezalis, K. Wight, N. Erickson
{"title":"A compact 118GHz radiometer for the Micro-sized Microwave Atmospheric Satellite (MicroMAS)1","authors":"I. Osaretin, W. Blackwell, G. Allen, S. Conrad, C. Galbraith, R. Leslie, W. Osborn, B. Reid, L. Retherford, M. Scarito, C. Semisch, M. Shields, E. Thompson, D. Toher, D. Townzen, R. Wezalis, K. Wight, N. Erickson","doi":"10.1109/USNC-URSI-NRSM.2013.6525009","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Summary form only given. A novel compact radiometer observing nine channels near the 118.75GHz oxygen absorption line is introduced. The radiometer is designed as the payload for the Micro-sized Microwave Atmospheric Satellite (MicroMAS). MicroMAS is a dual-spinning 3U CubeSat that aims to address the need for low-cost, mission-flexible, and rapidly deployable spaceborne sensors. The focus of the current MicroMAS mission is to observe convective thunderstorms, tropical cyclones, and hurricanes from a near-equatorial orbit. As a low cost platform, MicroMAS offers the potential to deploy multiple satellites, in a constellation, that can provide near-continuous views of severe weather. The existing architecture of few, high-cost platforms, infrequently view the same earth area which can miss rapid changes in the strength and direction of evolving storms thus degrading forecast accuracy. MicroMAS is a scalable CubeSat-based system that will pave the path towards improved revisit rates over critical earth regions, and achieve state-of-the-art performance relative to current systems with respect to spatial, spectral, and radiometric resolution. The current MicroMAS mission will demonstrate the viability of CubeSats for high-fidelity environmental monitoring and space control that would provide profound advances by reducing costs, by at least an order of magnitude, while increasing robustness to launch and sensor failures. This discourse focuses on the compact radiometer designed for this CubeSat mission. The radiometer is housed in a 1U (10 × 10 × 10 cm) payload section of the 3U (10 × 10 × 30 cm) MicroMAS CubeSat. The payload is scanned about the spacecraft's velocity vector as the spacecraft orbits the earth, creating crosstrack scans across the earth's surface. The first portion of the radiometer comprises a horn-fed reflector antenna, with a full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) beamwidth of 2.4°. Hence, the scanned beam has an approximate footprint diameter of 20Km at nadir incidence from a nominal altitude of 500Km. The antenna system is designed for a minimum 95% beam efficiency. The next stage of the radiometer consists of superheterodyne front-end receiver electronics with single sideband (SSB) operation. The front-end electronics includes an RF preamplifier module, a mixer module, and a local oscillator (LO). The RF preamplifier module contains a low noise RF amplifier and a weakly coupled noise diode for radiometric calibration. The mixer module comprises a HEMT diode mixer and an IF preamplifier MMIC. The LO is obtained using a 30GHz dielectric resonant oscillator (DRO) and a resistive diode tripler to obtain a 90GHz LO frequency. A key technology development in the MicroMAS radiometer system is the ultra-compact intermediate frequency processor (IFP) module for channelization, detection, and analog-to-digital conversion. The antenna system, RF front-end electronics, and backend IF electronics are highly integrated, miniaturized, and optimized for low-power operation. The payload also contains microcontrollers, with one of such being in the payload interface module (PIM), to package and transmit radiometric and housekeeping data to the spacecraft bus. A voltage regulator module (VRM) was also designed for the payload to convert the input bus voltage to the required voltages for the payload electronics. The payload requires 3W (average) of power. The MicroMAS payload flight unit is currently being developed by MIT Lincoln Laboratory, and the spacecraft bus flight unit being developed by the MIT Space Systems Laboratory and the MIT Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences for a 2014 launch to be provided by the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative program.","PeriodicalId":123571,"journal":{"name":"2013 US National Committee of URSI National Radio Science Meeting (USNC-URSI NRSM)","volume":"12 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2013-06-06","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"2013 US National Committee of URSI National Radio Science Meeting (USNC-URSI NRSM)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/USNC-URSI-NRSM.2013.6525009","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Summary form only given. A novel compact radiometer observing nine channels near the 118.75GHz oxygen absorption line is introduced. The radiometer is designed as the payload for the Micro-sized Microwave Atmospheric Satellite (MicroMAS). MicroMAS is a dual-spinning 3U CubeSat that aims to address the need for low-cost, mission-flexible, and rapidly deployable spaceborne sensors. The focus of the current MicroMAS mission is to observe convective thunderstorms, tropical cyclones, and hurricanes from a near-equatorial orbit. As a low cost platform, MicroMAS offers the potential to deploy multiple satellites, in a constellation, that can provide near-continuous views of severe weather. The existing architecture of few, high-cost platforms, infrequently view the same earth area which can miss rapid changes in the strength and direction of evolving storms thus degrading forecast accuracy. MicroMAS is a scalable CubeSat-based system that will pave the path towards improved revisit rates over critical earth regions, and achieve state-of-the-art performance relative to current systems with respect to spatial, spectral, and radiometric resolution. The current MicroMAS mission will demonstrate the viability of CubeSats for high-fidelity environmental monitoring and space control that would provide profound advances by reducing costs, by at least an order of magnitude, while increasing robustness to launch and sensor failures. This discourse focuses on the compact radiometer designed for this CubeSat mission. The radiometer is housed in a 1U (10 × 10 × 10 cm) payload section of the 3U (10 × 10 × 30 cm) MicroMAS CubeSat. The payload is scanned about the spacecraft's velocity vector as the spacecraft orbits the earth, creating crosstrack scans across the earth's surface. The first portion of the radiometer comprises a horn-fed reflector antenna, with a full-width at half-maximum (FWHM) beamwidth of 2.4°. Hence, the scanned beam has an approximate footprint diameter of 20Km at nadir incidence from a nominal altitude of 500Km. The antenna system is designed for a minimum 95% beam efficiency. The next stage of the radiometer consists of superheterodyne front-end receiver electronics with single sideband (SSB) operation. The front-end electronics includes an RF preamplifier module, a mixer module, and a local oscillator (LO). The RF preamplifier module contains a low noise RF amplifier and a weakly coupled noise diode for radiometric calibration. The mixer module comprises a HEMT diode mixer and an IF preamplifier MMIC. The LO is obtained using a 30GHz dielectric resonant oscillator (DRO) and a resistive diode tripler to obtain a 90GHz LO frequency. A key technology development in the MicroMAS radiometer system is the ultra-compact intermediate frequency processor (IFP) module for channelization, detection, and analog-to-digital conversion. The antenna system, RF front-end electronics, and backend IF electronics are highly integrated, miniaturized, and optimized for low-power operation. The payload also contains microcontrollers, with one of such being in the payload interface module (PIM), to package and transmit radiometric and housekeeping data to the spacecraft bus. A voltage regulator module (VRM) was also designed for the payload to convert the input bus voltage to the required voltages for the payload electronics. The payload requires 3W (average) of power. The MicroMAS payload flight unit is currently being developed by MIT Lincoln Laboratory, and the spacecraft bus flight unit being developed by the MIT Space Systems Laboratory and the MIT Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences for a 2014 launch to be provided by the NASA CubeSat Launch Initiative program.
微型微波大气卫星(MicroMAS)1的紧凑118GHz辐射计
只提供摘要形式。介绍了一种新型紧凑型辐射计,可观测118.75GHz氧吸收线附近的9个通道。辐射计被设计为微型微波大气卫星(MicroMAS)的有效载荷。MicroMAS是一颗双旋转3U立方体卫星,旨在满足对低成本、任务灵活、快速部署的星载传感器的需求。目前MicroMAS任务的重点是观察近赤道轨道上的对流雷暴、热带气旋和飓风。作为一个低成本平台,MicroMAS提供了在一个星座中部署多颗卫星的潜力,可以提供近乎连续的恶劣天气视图。现有的几个高成本平台的架构很少观测同一地球区域,这可能会错过风暴发展的强度和方向的快速变化,从而降低预报的准确性。MicroMAS是一种可扩展的基于立方体卫星的系统,将为提高关键地球区域的重访率铺平道路,并在空间、光谱和辐射分辨率方面实现相对于当前系统的最先进性能。目前的MicroMAS任务将证明立方体卫星在高保真环境监测和空间控制方面的可行性,这将通过降低成本提供深远的进步,至少降低一个数量级,同时增加发射和传感器故障的稳健性。本文主要讨论为立方体卫星任务设计的紧凑型辐射计。辐射计被安置在3U (10 × 10 × 30厘米)MicroMAS CubeSat的1U (10 × 10 × 10厘米)有效载荷部分。当航天器绕地球轨道运行时,有效载荷会被扫描航天器的速度矢量,从而在地球表面产生交叉扫描。辐射计的第一部分包括一个喇叭馈电反射器天线,其半最大波束宽度为2.4°。因此,扫描波束在名义高度为500Km的最低点入射时,足迹直径约为20Km。天线系统被设计为至少95%的波束效率。下一阶段的辐射计包括超外差前端接收电子与单边带(SSB)操作。前端电子器件包括射频前置放大器模块、混频器模块和本地振荡器(LO)。射频前置放大器模块包含一个低噪声射频放大器和一个用于辐射校准的弱耦合噪声二极管。混频器模块包括一个HEMT二极管混频器和一个中频前置放大器MMIC。本LO是使用一个30GHz的介电谐振振荡器(DRO)和一个电阻二极管三倍器来获得90GHz的本LO频率。MicroMAS辐射计系统的一项关键技术是用于信道化、检测和模数转换的超紧凑中频处理器(IFP)模块。天线系统、射频前端电子设备和后端中频电子设备高度集成、小型化,并针对低功耗操作进行了优化。有效载荷还包含微控制器,其中一个在有效载荷接口模块(PIM)中,用于打包和传输辐射测量和管理数据到航天器总线。电压调节器模块(VRM)也被设计用于有效载荷,将输入总线电压转换为有效载荷电子设备所需的电压。有效载荷需要3W(平均)功率。MicroMAS有效载荷飞行单元目前由麻省理工学院林肯实验室开发,航天器总线飞行单元由麻省理工学院空间系统实验室和麻省理工学院地球与行星科学系开发,将于2014年发射,由美国宇航局立方体卫星发射计划提供。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
求助全文
约1分钟内获得全文 求助全文
来源期刊
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
×
引用
GB/T 7714-2015
复制
MLA
复制
APA
复制
导出至
BibTeX EndNote RefMan NoteFirst NoteExpress
×
提示
您的信息不完整,为了账户安全,请先补充。
现在去补充
×
提示
您因"违规操作"
具体请查看互助需知
我知道了
×
提示
确定
请完成安全验证×
copy
已复制链接
快去分享给好友吧!
我知道了
右上角分享
点击右上角分享
0
联系我们:info@booksci.cn Book学术提供免费学术资源搜索服务,方便国内外学者检索中英文文献。致力于提供最便捷和优质的服务体验。 Copyright © 2023 布克学术 All rights reserved.
京ICP备2023020795号-1
ghs 京公网安备 11010802042870号
Book学术文献互助
Book学术文献互助群
群 号:604180095
Book学术官方微信