- Humidity Sounder for Brazil
The Humidity Sounder for Brazil (HSB) was an instrument launched on
NASA 'sEarth Observing System satellite Aqua launched in May 2002. It was a four-channel passive microwave radiometer, with one channel at 150 GHz and three channels at 183 GHz. It was very similar in design to the AMSU-B instrument, except it lacked the 89 GHz surface sounding channel. It was intended to study profiles of atmosphericwater vapor and provide improved input data to the cloud-clearing algorithms in the Unified AIRS Retrieval Suite, but the scan mirror motor failed on February 5, 2003. It worked with theAtmospheric Infrared Sounder and AMSU-A to form the AIRS Sounding Suite.HSB was manufactured by
Matra Marconi Space , Limited (MMS), in the United Kingdom under a contract with the Brazilian National Institute for Space Research,INPE .Instrument Characteristics
*Heritage: AMSU-B
*Swath: 1650 km
*Spatial resolution: 13.5 km horizontal atnadir
*Mass: 51 kg
*Duty cycle: 100%
*Power: 56 W
*Data rate: 4.2 kbit/s
*Field of View: ± 49.5 degrees cross-track
*Instrument Instantaneous Field of View: 1.1 degrees circularTable 1: Radiometric characteristics of the HSB
History
HSB stopped scanning suddenly and without warning over the Pacific Ocean February 5, 2003 at 21:39 UTC. The most likely cause is an electrical failure in the scan electronics. By design AMSU-B and therefore HSB had very limited hardware redundancy and software update capability.
External links
* [http://daac.gsfc.nasa.gov/AIRS/documentation/hsb_instrument_guide.shtml HSB instrument guide]
* [http://daac.gsfc.nasa.gov/AIRS/data_products.shtml HSB data at NASA Goddard]
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