A43A-0237
The Hyper-Angular Rainbow Polarimeter (HARP) CubeSat Observatory and the Characterization of Cloud Properties

Thursday, 17 December 2015
Poster Hall (Moscone South)
Tim L. Neilsen1, Jose-Vanderlei Martins2, Roberto Armando Fernandez Borda3, Cameron Weston1, Crystal Frazier1, Dominik Cieslak2 and Kevin Townsend2, (1)Space Dynamics Laboratory, North Logan, UT, United States, (2)University of Maryland Baltimore County, Baltimore, MD, United States, (3)Joint Center for Earth Systems Technology, Greenbelt, MD, United States
Abstract:
The Hyper-Angular Rainbow Polarimeter HARP instrument is a wide field-of-view imager that splits three spatially identical images into three independent polarizers and detector arrays.This technique achieves simultaneous imagery of the same ground target in three polarization states and is the key innovation to achieve high polarimetric accuracy with no moving parts. The spacecraft consists of a 3U CubeSat with 3-axis stabilization designed to keep the image optics pointing nadir during data collection but maximizing solar panel sun pointing otherwise. The hyper-angular capability is achieved by acquiring overlapping images at very fast speeds.

An imaging polarimeter with hyper-angular capability can make a strong contribution to characterizing cloud properties. Non-polarized multi-angle measurements have been shown to besensitive to thin cirrus and can be used to provide climatology ofthese clouds. Adding polarization and increasing the number ofobservation angles allows for the retrieval of the complete sizedistribution of cloud droplets, including accurate information onthe width of the droplet distribution in addition to the currentlyretrieved effective radius.

The HARP mission is funded by the NASA Earth Science Technology Office as part of In-Space Validation of Earth Science Technologies (InVEST) program. The HARP instrument is designed and built by a team of students and professionals lead by Dr. Vanderlei Martines at University of Maryland, Baltimore County. The HARP spacecraft is designed and built by a team of students and professionals and The Space Dynamics Laboratory.