CAMEX-4 Conically-Scanning Two-look Airborne Radiometer (C-STAR)

The CAMEX-4 Conically-Scanning Two-look Airborne Radiometer (C-STAR) is a passive microwave radiometer which flew on the NASA DC-8 aircraft during CAMEX-4. Collecting data at 37 GHz, C-STAR was able to observe the ocean surface and derive windspeed and direction.

The fourth field campaign in the CAMEX series (CAMEX-4) ran from 16 August to 24 September, 2001 and was based out of Jacksonville Naval Air Station, Florida, and included missions in the Gulf of Mexico, Carribean and Western Atlantic. CAMEX-4 focused on the study of tropical cyclone (hurricane) development, tracking, intensification, and landfalling impacts using NASA-funded aircraft and surface remote sensing instrumentation.

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(START DATE: 16 Aug 2001 STOP DATE: 24 Sep 2001)

Reference: Marzano, J., Mugnai, A., Smith, E.A., Xiang, X., Turk, J., and J. Vivekanandan, 1994: Active and Passive Microwave Remote Sensing of Precipitating Storms During CaPE. Part II: Intercomparison of Precipitation Retrievals Over Land from AMPR Radiometer and CP-2 Radar, Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Special Issue on Retrieval of Hydrological Variables from Space-based Microwave Instruments, Volume 54, pp.29-51.

Turk, J., Vivekanandan, J., Marzano, F.S., Hood, R.E., Spencer, R.W., and F.J. LaFontaine, 1994: Active and Passive Microwave Remote Sensing of Precipitating Storms During CaPE. Part I: Advanced Microwave Precipitation Radiometer and Polarimetric Radar Measurements and Models, Meteorology and Atmospheric Physics, Special Issue on Retrieval of Hydrological Variables from Space-based Microwave Instruments, Volume 54, pp.3-27.


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