Studies using Homemade Microwave Radiometers
** IN-PERSON **
Dr. Norm Grody
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
Monday September 11, 2023, 2 PM ET
SLIDES
*Refreshments will be served*
Abstract:
For more than 30 years I worked on microwave radiometers as applied to the atmospheric and earth sciences. This all began when working at NASA in 1971, followed by NOAA beginning in 1972. My 1 st talk at ESSIC four years ago was on satellite microwave radiometry. This talk describes work I did following my NOAA retirement in 2005 when I began constructing homemade radiometers between 4 and 22 GHz. The talk primarily describes the calibration and emissivity measurements obtained using near- and far-field radiometer measurements. It also discusses the measurement and mitigation of radio frequency interference observed between 20 to 22 GHz.
Biosketch:
Dr. Grody completed his PhD in Electrophysics in 1971 at NYU doing plasma research. He then began his government career at NASA when they first began launching experimental microwave radiometers aboard satellites to view earth from space. In 1972 he joined NOAA to work on more advanced microwave radiometers by the Air Force, Navy, NASA and NOAA. At NOAA he was mainly involved in developing algorithms to derive surface and atmospheric parameters from the radiometric measurements. Due to their all weather capability, microwave radiometers are now considered the primary instrument to monitor, analyze and forecast weather and climate.
Norm Grody’s book, Microwave Radiometry (click for access)
Webinar:
Event site: https://go.umd.edu/ngrody
Zoom Webinar: https://go.umd.edu/ngrodywebinar
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Zoom password: essic
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Cazzy Medley: cazzy@umd.edu
Resources:
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Seminar Google calendar: https://go.umd.edu/essicseminarcalendar
Seminar recordings on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/ESSICUMD