Availability of Seasat synthetic aperture radar imagery

One of the sensors of the Seasat satellite was a synthetic aperture radar (SAR), which was operated over both oceanic and land areas. The Seasat SAR was an active imaging microwave system which transmitted and received horizontally polarized radiation at L-band frequency (1.275 GHz, 23-cm wavelength...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Holt, B.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1981
Subjects:
82
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19820031504
Description
Summary:One of the sensors of the Seasat satellite was a synthetic aperture radar (SAR), which was operated over both oceanic and land areas. The Seasat SAR was an active imaging microwave system which transmitted and received horizontally polarized radiation at L-band frequency (1.275 GHz, 23-cm wavelength). Extensive coverage was obtained over North America, Europe, the Eastern Pacific Ocean, the Western and Northern Atlantic Ocean, and the Beaufort Sea. Surface coverage was also acquired over limited portions of Central America, the Gulf of Mexico, and the Caribbean Sea. The majority of the data has been optically processed in a so-called survey mode. Each optically processed Seasat pass has a swath width of 100 km at a scale of 1:500,000. A subset of the SAR data has been digitally processed in a so-called high-resolution mode. Digital processing has been performed upon selected scenes with dimensions of 100 x 100 km. Digitally processed imagery has a nominal ground resolution of 25 m.