Welcome to the  
SMAPEx-3 Archive
Soil Moisture Active Passive Experiment
 

Soil Moisture and Ocean Salinity (SMOS)

The SMOS satellite was launched on 2nd November 2009, making it the first satellite to provide continuous multi-angular L-band (1.4GHz) radiometric measurements over the globe. Over continental surfaces, SMOS provides near-surface soil moisture data at ~50km resolution with a repeat cycle of 2-3 days. The payload is a 2D interferometer yielding a range of incidence angles from 0° to 55° at both V and H polarisations, and a 1,000km swath width. Its multi-incidence angle capability is expected to assist in determining ancillary data requirements such as vegetation attenuation. This satellite has a 6:00am/pm equator overpass time (6:00am local solar time at ascending node). Due to the synthetic aperture approach of this satellite, brightness temperature observations will be processed onto a fixed hexagonal grid with an approximately 12km node separation. While the actual footprint size will vary according to position in the swath, incidence angle etc., it will be approximately 42km diameter on average. The features of SMOS are summarized below. SMOS data can be downloaded from ESA.

Mission

SMOS

Sensor

Microwave Imaging Radiometer using Aperture Synthesis (MIRAS) using passive microwave 2D-interferometer concept

Spacecraft

SMOS

Launch date

2nd, Nov. 2009

Design life

Minimum 3 years

Orbit

Sun-synchronous, dawn/dusk, quasi-circular orbit at altitude 758km. 6.00am local solar time at ascending node.

Spacecraft operations control centre

CNES, Toulouse, France

Centre frequency (GHz)

1.413 (L-band; 21cm)

Band width (MHz)

24

Polarisation

H & V (polarimetric mode optional)

Incidence angle(°)

0-55

Swath (km)

1000

Spatial resolution (km)

35 at centre of field of view

Radiometric resolution (K)

0.8-2.2

Temporal resolution

3 days revisit at Equator

 

SMOS overpass time

The SMOS overpass times for the SMAPEx study area have been determined from the ESOV software based on the OSF file of 18th, Dec. 2009, and are provided in the table below. Date and time are in UTC.

                  =full SMOS coverage of airborne box;         =partial SMOS coverage

                  =concurrent;                                                                =non concurrent

Date (UTC)

SMOS overpass time (UTC)

Flight Type

05/09/2011

07:36

Regional

05/09/2011

20:07

Regional

07/09/2011

●20:29

Regional

10/09/2011

●20:12

Regional

13/09/2011

●07:25

Regional

15/09/2011

●20:17

Regional

18/09/2011

●07:30

Regional

18/09/2011

20:01

Regional

19/09/2011

06:51

Regional

21/09/2011

07:13

Regional

23/09/2011

07:36

Regional

23/09/2011

20:06

Regional

 

 

Created: July 2010
Last Modified: October 2011
Maintainer: Xiaoling Wu, xiaoling.wu@monash.edu