The Microwave Humidity Sounder (MHS) is a five-channel passive microwave radiometer, with channels from 89 to 190 GHz. It is very similar in design to the AMSU-B instrument, but some channel frequencies have been altered. It is used to study profiles of atmospheric water vapor and provide improved input data to the cloud-clearing algorithms in the IR and MW sounder suites. Instruments were launched on NOAA's POES satellite series starting with NOAA-18 launched in May 2005 and the European Space Agency's MetOp series starting with MetOp-A launched in October 2006, continuing with MetOp-B launched in September 2012 and Metop-C launched in November 2018. The follow on instrument to MHS is MWS on the Metop-SGA satellites.
The Microwave Humidity Sounder was designed and developed by Astrium EU in Portsmouth, UK, under contract to EUMETSAT.
Instrument characteristics
- Heritage: AMSU-B, HSB
- Swath: 1650 km
- Spatial resolution: 17 km horizontal at nadir
- Mass: 63 kg
- Duty cycle: 100%
- Power: 74 W (BOL)
- Data rate: 4.2 kbit/s
- Field of View: ± 49.5 degrees cross-track
- Instrument Instantaneous Field of View: 1.1 degrees circular
Table 1: Radiometric characteristics of the MHS
Channel Number | AMSU-B Channel Number |
Frequency (GHz) |
AMSU-B Frequency (GHz) |
Bandwidth (MHz) |
Instrument Sensitivity NEDT (K) |
Polarization |
1 | 16 | 89.0 | 89.0 ± 0.9 | 2800 | 0.22 | Vertical |
2 | 17 | 157.0 | 150 ± 0.9 | 2800 | 0.34 | Vertical |
3 | 18 | 183.311 ± 1.00 | 183.31 ± 1.00 | 2 x 500 | 0.51 | Horizontal |
4 | 19 | 183.311 ± 3.00 | 183.31 ± 3.00 | 2 x 1000 | 0.40 | Horizontal |
5 | 20 | 190.311 | 183.31 ± 7.00 | 2200 | 0.46 | Vertical |
References
- "Metop series – Future Satellites". EUMETSAT. 21 November 2022. Retrieved 21 November 2022.
- "Instrument: MHS". World Meteorological Organization. Retrieved 12 August 2024.