Claims
- 1. A digital radiometer comprising:
means for sampling an analog signal at a predetermined sampling frequency to digitize said analog signal; means for processing said digitized signal; means for applying a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) to said processed signal; and means for formatting an output of said FFT to provide an output representing a temperature.
- 2. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 1 further comprising said digital radiometer being located on a satellite.
- 3. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 2 wherein said analog signal is representative of an atmospheric temperature.
- 4. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 1 wherein said means for processing said digitized signal further comprises a microchip for filtering, decimating, applying Doppler compensation, and applying a window in the time domain.
- 5. A method for performing spectral analysis on a portion of a spectrum containing an oxygen absorption line, said method comprising the steps of:
sampling an analog signal at a sampling frequency of Fs to collect sampled data; filtering said sampled data; decimating said data by a predetermined factor; compensating for Doppler effects; applying a window in the time domain; applying a Fast Fourier Transform having a predetermined overlap resulting in FFT output; computing the magnitude squared of the FFT output; integrating the magnitude squared of the FFT output; summing the integrated FFT outputs for a predetermined bin; formatting said summed outputs for output.
- 6. The method as claimed in claim 5 further comprising the step of parametrically characterizing the FFT output.
- 7. The method as claimed in claim 6 wherein said step of parametrically characterizing the FFT output further comprises computing a least squares polynomial curve fit.
- 8. The method as claimed in claim 5 wherein said step of filtering further comprises a Hilbert Transform.
- 9. The method as claimed in claim 5 wherein said step of compensating for Doppler effects further comprises the steps of:
multiplying the decimated data by ej*2*π*(f/Fd)*n, where f is a frequency shift corresponding to Doppler being corrected for, Fd is a decimated sampling frequency, n is a sample index, and j is the square root of −1.
- 10. The method as claimed in claim 5 wherein said step of applying a Fast Fourier Transform further comprises applying a Fast Fourier Transform having an overlap of 50%.
- 11. A method for performing spectral analysis on a portion of a spectrum containing an oxygen absorption line, said method comprising the steps of:
sampling an analog signal at a sampling frequency of Fs to collect sampled data; filtering said sampled data using a Hilbert Transform; decimating said data by a factor of two; compensating for Doppler effects by multiplying said data by ej*2*π*(f/Fd)*n; applying a window in the time domain; applying a Fast Fourier Transform having an overlap of 50% resulting in FFT output; computing the magnitude squared of the FFT output; integrating the magnitude squared of the FFT output; summing the integrated FFT outputs for a predetermined bin; formatting said summed outputs for output.
- 12. The method as claimed in claim 11 wherein said step of formatting said summed outputs further comprises the step of parametrically characterizing the FFT output.
- 13. The method as claimed in claim 11 wherein said step of parametrically characterizing the FFT output further comprises computing a least squares polynomial curve fit.
- 14. A digital radiometer comprising:
a signal sampling unit; a signal processor for applying a Fast Fourier Transform to a sampled signal whereby said digital radiometer produces a spectral analysis on a portion of the spectrum containing an oxygen absorption line.
- 15. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 14 wherein said signal sampling unit further comprises a sampling frequency of Fs Hertz to collect data.
- 16. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 15 wherein said signal processor further comprises:
a downconverter for placing the center of the band at ¾ Fs; and a decimator for decimating the sampling frequency by a factor of 2.
- 17. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 16 wherein said downconverter further comprises a filter.
- 18. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 17 wherein said filter is a Hilbert Transform.
- 19. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 16 wherein said signal processor further comprises Doppler compensation.
- 20. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 19 wherein said Doppler compensation further comprises multiplying the data by ej*2*π*(f/Fd)*n, where f is a frequency shift corresponding to the Doppler being corrected for, Fd is a decimated sampling frequency and n is a sample index
- 21. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 19 further comprising a Fast Fourier Transform (FFT) having a predetermined overlap.
- 22. The digital radiometer as claimed in claim 21 wherein said overlap is 50%.
GOVERNMENT INTEREST
[0001] This invention was made with Government support under Contract No. F04701-97-C-0033. The Government has certain rights in the invention.