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Status of the Dielectric Constant of Sea Water at L-Band for Remote Sensing of Salinity

David M. Le Vine, Roger H. Lang, Yiwen Zhou, Emmanuel P. Dinnat, Thomas Meißner

2022IEEE Transactions on Geoscience and Remote Sensing14 citationsDOI

Abstract

The model expressing the dielectric constant of sea water at microwave frequencies as a function of salinity and temperature is an important element in remote sensing of sea surface salinity. It is also important independently as a description of the physical properties of salt water. A major milestone was the development in the late 1970’s by Klein and Swift of a model based on laboratory measurements at L- and S-band and a functional form supported by theory for polar molecules and previous work on freshwater. Much of the subsequent work has focused on measurements at higher frequency and determining model parameters tuned to apply for applications such as remote sensing of sea surface temperature. Interest in the dielectric constant at 1.4 GHz (L-band) increased again with the development of SMOS and Aquarius to measure salinity from space. But there have been few new measurements at L-band and often confusion regarding the applicability of new models at 1.4 GHz. The objective of this manuscript is to compare available models in the context of how well they represent the dielectric constant of sea water at 1.4 GHz. Among the criteria applied will be the recent measurements at the George Washington University of the dielectric constant at 1.4 GHz.

Topics & Concepts

DielectricSalinityMicrowaveContext (archaeology)Remote sensingEnvironmental scienceSeawaterPermittivityMaterials scienceGeologyComputer scienceOceanographyOptoelectronicsTelecommunicationsPaleontologySoil Moisture and Remote SensingUnderwater Acoustics ResearchArctic and Antarctic ice dynamics
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