| 1. | The relationship between brightness temperature and temperature can be written as:
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| 2. | The brightness temperature is not a temperature as ordinarily understood.
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| 3. | The fraction of brightness temperature to actual temperature is defined as the emissivity.
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| 4. | Nonthermal sources can have very high brightness temperatures.
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| 5. | Venus has a high brightness temperature in the radio frequencies compared to the infrared.
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| 6. | For ideal black bodies, the brightness temperature is also the directly measurable temperature.
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| 7. | The Hydro-Estimator algorithm differs from the original AE by using a brightness temperature screening technique.
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| 8. | This implies a greater sensitivity to salinity in the vertical component of brightness temperature than in the horizontal.
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| 9. | Where T _ b refers to the brightness temperature and T is simply the temperature of the surface seawater.
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| 10. | The vertical component of the brightness temperature shows a greater spread in constant salinity curves than the horizontal component.
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