Microwave receiver prototype development for the Hyperspectral Microwave Atmospheric Sounder (HyMAS)1

Radio Science Meeting(2013)

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Abstract
Recent technology advances have significantly changed the landscape of modern radiometry by enabling miniaturized, low-power, and low-noise radio-frequency receivers operating at frequencies up to 200 GHz. These advances enable the practical use of receiver arrays to multiplex multiple broad frequency bands into many spectral channels. We use the term “hyperspectral microwave” to refer generically to microwave sounding systems with approximately 50 spectral channels or more. We present the design and analysis of the receiver subsystem for the Hyperspectral Microwave Atmospheric Sounder (HyMAS), with focus on the ultra compact Intermediate Frequency (IF) processor module. HyMAS comprises multiple receivers operating near the oxygen absorption line at 118.75GHz and the water vapor absorption line at 183.31GHz. The hyperspectral microwave receiver system will be integrated into a scanhead compatible with the NASA GSFC Conical Scanning Microwave Imaging Radiometer (CoSMIR) airborne system to facilitate demonstration and performance characterization. HyMAS is designed to have a 52-channel hyperspectral microwave receiver subsystem with four temperature sounding bands (two antennas) near 118.75GHz and two moisture sounding bands (one antenna) near 183.31GHz. Both polarizations are measured (although at slightly different IF passbands) to increase the total channel count. Subharmonic mixers will be pumped by phase-locked oscillators, and single-sideband operation will be achieved by waveguide filtering of the lower sideband. Size/volume constraints on the receiver subsystem led to a relatively high IF frequency (18 - 29GHz) to facilitate miniaturization of the IF processor module. Broadband operation over such a relatively high intermediate frequency range is a technical challenge for the front-end receiver sys
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atmospheric measuring apparatus,atmospheric techniques,geophysical signal processing,interdigital transducers,microwave measurement,microwave receivers,permittivity,radiometry,waveguide filters,cosmir airborne system,hymas,hyperspectral microwave atmospheric sounder,ltcc technology,mit lincoln laboratory,nasa gsfc conical scanning microwave imaging radiometer,siw,broadband operation,channel receiver subsystem,compact envelope,embedded passive components,filter rejection,frequency 118.75 ghz,frequency 183.31 ghz,front-end receiver system,hyperspectral microwave receiver subsystem,insertion loss,interdigital filter design,low-temperature cofired ceramic technology,microwave receiver prototype development,microwave sounding system,miniaturized low-power low-noise radiofrequency receiver,multiplex multiple broad frequency band,oxygen absorption line,phase-locked oscillator,polarization measurement,receiver array,receiver front-end module,receiver temperature,shape factor,sharper skirt,single-sideband operation,size constraint,spectral channel,stackable filter design,subharmonic mixer,substrate dielectric constant,substrate integrated waveguide,temperature 2000 k to 3000 k,temperature sounding band,ultracompact if processor module,ultracompact intermediate frequency processor module,volume constraintwaveguide,water vapor absorption line,waveguide filtering
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