Computer Science – Sound
Scientific paper
Jun 1992
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1992spie.1745...89c&link_type=abstract
In: Instrumentation for planetary and terrestrial atmospheric remote sensing; Proceedings of the Meeting, San Diego, CA, July 23
Computer Science
Sound
Atmospheric Sounding, Infrared Spectrometers, Photometers, Remote Sensors, Satellite-Borne Instruments, Ultraviolet Spectrometers, Extreme Ultraviolet Radiation, Ionospheric Sounding, Near Infrared Radiation
Scientific paper
An account is given of the NOAA's Tiros-J satellite RAIDS experiment's Extreme UV Spectrograph, as well as its three fixed-filter photometers, respectively in O I (630 A), O I (777 A) and Na (589 A), and the near-IR spectrometer. All of these instruments are mounted on a mechanical-scan platform that scans the limb from 75 to 750 km in the orbital plane of the satellite every 90 sec. Launch is scheduled for the first half of 1993.
Chakrabarti Supriya
Christensen Andrew B.
Gutierrez David J.
Kayser David C.
McCoy Robert P.
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