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    The RED Experiment: An Assessment of Boundary Layer Effects in a Trade Winds Regime on Microwave and Infrared Propagation over the Sea

    Source: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society:;2004:;volume( 085 ):;issue: 009::page 1355
    Author:
    Anderson, Kenneth
    ,
    Doss-Hammel, Stephen
    ,
    Tsintikidis, Dimitris
    ,
    Brooks, Barbara
    ,
    Smith, Michael
    ,
    Caffrey, Peter
    ,
    Clarke, Antony
    ,
    Cohen, Leo
    ,
    De Jong, Arie
    ,
    De Leeuw, Gerrit
    ,
    Moerman, Marcel
    ,
    Crahan, Katie
    ,
    Davidson, Kenneth
    ,
    Frederickson, Paul
    ,
    Dion, Denis
    ,
    Friehe, Carl
    ,
    Khelif, Djamal
    ,
    Hristov, Tihomir
    ,
    Reid, Jeffery S.
    ,
    Reising, Steven
    ,
    Terrill, Eric
    DOI: 10.1175/BAMS-85-9-1355
    Publisher: American Meteorological Society
    Abstract: In the surface layer over the ocean the Monin?Obukhov similarity theory is often applied to construct vertical profiles of pressure, temperature, humidity, and wind speed. In this context, the rough boundary layer is derived from empirical relations where ocean wave characteristics are neglected. For seas where wind speed is less than ?10 m s?1 there is excellent agreement for both meteorological and microwave propagation theory and measurements. However, recent evidence indicates that even small waves perturb these profiles. It is, therefore, hypothesized that mechanical forcing by sea waves is responsible for modifying scalar profiles in the lowest portion of the surface layer, thereby reducing the effects of evaporation ducting on microwave signal propagation. This hypothesis, that a rough sea surface modifies the evaporation duct, was the primary motivation for the Rough Evaporation Duct (RED) experiment. RED was conducted off of the Hawaiian Island of Oahu from late August to mid-September 2001. The Scripps Institution of Oceanography Research Platform Floating Instrument Platform, moored about 10 km off the northeast coast of Oahu, hosted the primary meteorological sensor suites and the transmitters for both the microwave and the infrared propagation links. Two land sites were instrumented?one with microwave receivers and the other with an infrared receiver?two buoys were deployed, a small boat was instrumented, and two aircraft flew various tracks to sense both sea and atmospheric conditions. Through meteorological and propagation measurements, RED achieved a number of its objectives. First, although we did not experience the desired conditions of simultaneous high seas, high winds, and large surface gradients of temperature and humidity necessary to significantly affect the evaporation duct, observations verify that waves do modify the scalars within the air?sea surface layer. Second, an intriguing and controversial result is the lack of agreement of the scalar profile constants with those typically observed over land. Finally, as expected for the conditions encountered during RED (trade wind, moderate seas, unstable), we show that the Monin?Obukhov similarity theory, combined with high-quality meteorological measurements, can be used by propagation models to accurately predict microwave signal levels.
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      The RED Experiment: An Assessment of Boundary Layer Effects in a Trade Winds Regime on Microwave and Infrared Propagation over the Sea

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    http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4214771
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    contributor authorAnderson, Kenneth
    contributor authorDoss-Hammel, Stephen
    contributor authorTsintikidis, Dimitris
    contributor authorBrooks, Barbara
    contributor authorSmith, Michael
    contributor authorCaffrey, Peter
    contributor authorClarke, Antony
    contributor authorCohen, Leo
    contributor authorDe Jong, Arie
    contributor authorDe Leeuw, Gerrit
    contributor authorMoerman, Marcel
    contributor authorCrahan, Katie
    contributor authorDavidson, Kenneth
    contributor authorFrederickson, Paul
    contributor authorDion, Denis
    contributor authorFriehe, Carl
    contributor authorKhelif, Djamal
    contributor authorHristov, Tihomir
    contributor authorReid, Jeffery S.
    contributor authorReising, Steven
    contributor authorTerrill, Eric
    date accessioned2017-06-09T16:42:39Z
    date available2017-06-09T16:42:39Z
    date copyright2004/09/01
    date issued2004
    identifier issn0003-0007
    identifier otherams-72735.pdf
    identifier urihttp://onlinelibrary.yabesh.ir/handle/yetl/4214771
    description abstractIn the surface layer over the ocean the Monin?Obukhov similarity theory is often applied to construct vertical profiles of pressure, temperature, humidity, and wind speed. In this context, the rough boundary layer is derived from empirical relations where ocean wave characteristics are neglected. For seas where wind speed is less than ?10 m s?1 there is excellent agreement for both meteorological and microwave propagation theory and measurements. However, recent evidence indicates that even small waves perturb these profiles. It is, therefore, hypothesized that mechanical forcing by sea waves is responsible for modifying scalar profiles in the lowest portion of the surface layer, thereby reducing the effects of evaporation ducting on microwave signal propagation. This hypothesis, that a rough sea surface modifies the evaporation duct, was the primary motivation for the Rough Evaporation Duct (RED) experiment. RED was conducted off of the Hawaiian Island of Oahu from late August to mid-September 2001. The Scripps Institution of Oceanography Research Platform Floating Instrument Platform, moored about 10 km off the northeast coast of Oahu, hosted the primary meteorological sensor suites and the transmitters for both the microwave and the infrared propagation links. Two land sites were instrumented?one with microwave receivers and the other with an infrared receiver?two buoys were deployed, a small boat was instrumented, and two aircraft flew various tracks to sense both sea and atmospheric conditions. Through meteorological and propagation measurements, RED achieved a number of its objectives. First, although we did not experience the desired conditions of simultaneous high seas, high winds, and large surface gradients of temperature and humidity necessary to significantly affect the evaporation duct, observations verify that waves do modify the scalars within the air?sea surface layer. Second, an intriguing and controversial result is the lack of agreement of the scalar profile constants with those typically observed over land. Finally, as expected for the conditions encountered during RED (trade wind, moderate seas, unstable), we show that the Monin?Obukhov similarity theory, combined with high-quality meteorological measurements, can be used by propagation models to accurately predict microwave signal levels.
    publisherAmerican Meteorological Society
    titleThe RED Experiment: An Assessment of Boundary Layer Effects in a Trade Winds Regime on Microwave and Infrared Propagation over the Sea
    typeJournal Paper
    journal volume85
    journal issue9
    journal titleBulletin of the American Meteorological Society
    identifier doi10.1175/BAMS-85-9-1355
    journal fristpage1355
    journal lastpage1365
    treeBulletin of the American Meteorological Society:;2004:;volume( 085 ):;issue: 009
    contenttypeFulltext
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    DSpace software copyright © 2002-2015  DuraSpace
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