The primary instrument on SWOT is the
Ka-band Radar Interferometer (
KaRIn), which uses
synthetic-aperture radar (SAR) technology, especially
SAR interferometry. Because SWOT operates at
Ka-band's relatively short wavelengths, – compared to the
Ku-band Jason series, – and at near-
nadir incidence angles (<5°), it is designed to be uniquely appropriate for measuring water surface elevations and inundation extents. The satellite will fly two radar antennas at either end of a mast, allowing it to measure the elevation of the surface across a wide swath. The new radar system is smaller than, but similar to, the one that flew on NASA's
Shuttle Radar Topography Mission (SRTM), which made high-resolution measurements of Earth's land surface in 2000. A conventional nadir radar altimeter will also be flown, and measure just beneath the satellite, as was done on the
Topex/Poseidon,
Jason series, and
SARAL missions. It is a "Jason-class" altimeter. == History ==