4.7 Article

Quality Control for Ocean Current Measurement Using High-Frequency Direction-Finding Radar

Journal

REMOTE SENSING
Volume 15, Issue 23, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/rs15235553

Keywords

direction finding; high-frequency radar; geometric dilution of precision; radio frequency interference; quality control; quality factor

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This paper proposes a method for quality evaluation and quality control of high-frequency radar measurements of ocean surface current data, which improves reliability. The proposed method has been validated and implemented in operational software.
High-frequency radars (HFRs) are important for remote sensing of the marine environment due to their ability to provide real-time, wide-coverage, and high-resolution measurements of the ocean surface current, wave height, and wind speed. However, due to the intricate multidimensional processing demands (e.g., time, Doppler, and space) for internal data and effective suppression of external noise, conducting quality control (QC) on radar-measured data is of great importance. In this paper, we first present a comprehensive quality evaluation model for both radial current and synthesized vector current obtained by direction-finding (DF) HFRs. In the proposed model, the quality factor (QF) is calculated for each current cell to evaluate its reliability. The QF for the radial current depends on the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and DF factor of the first-order Bragg peak region in the range-Doppler (RD) spectrum, and the QF for the synthesized vector current can be calculated using an error propagation model based on geometric dilution of precision (GDOP). A QC method is then proposed for processing HFR-derived surface current data via the following steps: (1) signal preprocessing is performed to minimize the effect of unwanted external signals such as radio frequency interference and ionospheric clutter; (2) radial currents with low QFs and outliers are removed; (3) the vector currents with low QFs are also removed before spatial smoothing and interpolation. The proposed QC method is validated using a one-month-long dataset collected by the Ocean State Monitoring and Analyzing Radar, model S (OSMAR-S). The improvement in the current quality is proven to be significant. Using the buoy data as ground truth, after applying QC, the correlation coefficients (CCs) of the radial current, synthesized current speed, and synthesized current direction are increased by 4.33 similar to 102.91%, 1.04 similar to 90.74%, and 1.20 similar to 62.67%, respectively, and the root mean square errors (RMSEs) are decreased by 2.51 similar to 49.65%, 7.86 similar to 27.22%, and 1.68 similar to 28.99%, respectively. The proposed QC method has now been incorporated into the operational software (RemoteSiteConsole v1.0.0.65) of OSMAR-S.

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