The Arctic Weather Satellite radiometer
Journal article, 2025

The Arctic Weather Satellite (AWS) is a project led by the European Space Agency (ESA) that has several novel aspects. From a technical perspective, it serves as a demonstrator of how to expand the network of operational satellite-based microwave sensors cost-effectively and acts as the proto-flight model for a suggested constellation of satellites, denoted as EUMETSAT Polar System (EPS) Sterna. The design philosophy has been to reduce complexity and instead focus the efforts on critical parts and characterise the instrument well before the launch. The single instrument onboard is a 19-channel microwave cross-track radiometer. There are 15 channels covering ranges around 54, 89 and 174 GHz. These are channels similar to ones found on existing sensors, however, thanks to the short development process, allowing use of more modern and recent technology, the performance and resolution of these channels on AWS exceed or match similar sensors, despite being a small satellite. Additionally, four channels around 325.15 GHz form a completely new frequency band for observations from space. The addition of these new channels aims to improve sensitivity to ice hydrometeors.In this article, we outline the mission and describe the instrument in detail, to support the usage of radiances measured by AWS. The satellite was launched in August 2024, and the status towards the end of the commissioning phase is reflected here. For example, a characterisation of the noise performance is provided, showing that the target specifications have been met, for most channels with a margin. This is except for two channels identified to have technical issues already before the launch. If EPS-Sterna is selected by EUMETSAT, these and other identified problems will be corrected, but otherwise the constellation is expected to consist of recurrent models of AWS with minor modifications.

Author

Patrick Eriksson

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Anders Emrich

Omnisys Instruments

Kalle Kempe

Omnisys Instruments

Johan Riesbeck

Omnisys Instruments

Alhassan Aljarosha

Omnisys Instruments

Olivier Auriacombe

Omnisys Instruments

Joakim Kugelberg

OHB AG Group

Enne Hekma

OHB AG Group

Roland Albers

University of Bern

Axel Murk

University of Bern

Soren Moller Pedersen

Technical University of Denmark (DTU)

Laurenz John

Fraunhofer Society

Jan Stake

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment

Peter McEvoy

Chalmers, Space, Earth and Environment, Geoscience and Remote Sensing

Bengt Rydberg

SMHI

Adam Dybbroe

SMHI

Anke Thoss

SMHI

Alessio Canestri

EUMETSAT

Christophe Accadia

EUMETSAT

Paolo Colucci

EUMETSAT

Daniele Gherardi

European Space Agency (ESA)

Ville Kangas

European Space Agency (ESA)

Atmospheric Measurement Techniques

1867-1381 (ISSN) 1867-8548 (eISSN)

Vol. 18 18 4709-4729

Klimatsidan av Arctic Weather Satellite

Swedish National Space Board (2023-00139), 2024-05-01 -- 2026-04-30.

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Vehicle and Aerospace Engineering

Signal Processing

Meteorology and Atmospheric Sciences

DOI

10.5194/amt-18-4709-2025

More information

Latest update

10/3/2025