IEEE Journal of Selected Topics in Applied Earth Observations and Remote Sensing (Jan 2024)

Retrieving Ocean Surface Wind Speeds in Real Time on Spaceborne GNSS-R Receivers: Algorithm and Validation

  • Tongsheng Qiu,
  • Qi Zheng,
  • Xianyi Wang,
  • Feixiong Huang,
  • Junming Xia,
  • Fu Li,
  • Zhuoyan Wang,
  • Yueqiang Sun,
  • Qifei Du,
  • Weihua Bai,
  • Yuerong Cai,
  • Dongwei Wang,
  • Yusen Tian,
  • Shuangshuang Cheng

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1109/JSTARS.2023.3344762
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17
pp. 2201 – 2212

Abstract

Read online

Based on delay-Doppler maps (DDMs) in raw counts generated by spaceborne global navigation satellite system reflectometry (GNSS-R) receivers, retrieving ocean surface wind speeds is feasible, so several spaceborne GNSS-R missions have been carried out. However, it is currently troubled by global data latency of several hours or even more due to the bottleneck in the satellite downlink. Consequently, this article, for the first time, presents an algorithm for spaceborne GNSS-R receivers to conduct the DDM calibration in orbit and then to retrieve ocean surface wind speeds in real time, which contributes to not only lightening the burden on downloading a wealth of scientific data but also broadcasting real-time ocean surface wind speeds to users. Since there is a power correlation between direct and reflected signals from the same GNSS satellite with respect to the GNSS-R receiver, this algorithm calibrates direct signal power first, and then it estimates the real-time GNSS transmitter effective isotropic radiated power at the reflected signal according to the normalized antenna pattern of the corresponding GNSS satellite. Afterward, DDMs in raw counts are calibrated. Finally, ocean surface wind speeds are computed using pretrained geophysical model functions. Exploiting the scientific data from the GNOS-II onboard China's FY-3E satellite, this algorithm is validated carefully, and final retrieved ocean surface wind speeds against collocated European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts wind speeds have an overall root-mean-square error of 1.68 m/s and 1.50 m/s for GPS-R and BDS-R, respectively.

Keywords