contributor author | Baidar, S. | |
contributor author | Tucker, S. C. | |
contributor author | Beaubien, M. | |
contributor author | Hardesty, R. M. | |
date accessioned | 2019-09-19T10:03:50Z | |
date available | 2019-09-19T10:03:50Z | |
date copyright | 9/14/2018 12:00:00 AM | |
date issued | 2018 | |
identifier other | jtech-d-18-0025.1.pdf | |
identifier uri | http://yetl.yabesh.ir/yetl1/handle/yetl/4261124 | |
description abstract | AbstractA two-look airborne Doppler wind lidar operating at the 532-nm laser wavelength, the Green Optical Autocovariance Wind Lidar (GrOAWL), was built and flown aboard the NASA WB-57 research aircraft. Flight campaign goals were to validate the instrument wind measurements and to demonstrate the two-look measurement concept proposed for spaceborne mission concepts such as the Atmospheric Transport, Hurricanes, and Extratropical Numerical Weather Prediction with the Optical Autocovariance Wind Lidar (ATHENA-OAWL) mission. The GrOAWL-measured winds were compared with collocated dropsonde measurements. Line-of-sight velocity (LOSV) measurements for the individual GrOAWL looks showed excellent agreement with dropsondes (R2 > 0.9). The LOSV biases were very small and not statistically different from 0 m s?1 at the 95% confidence interval (?0.07 ± 0.07 m s?1 and 0.01 ± 0.07 m s?1 for look 1 and look 2, respectively). The wind speed and direction profiles retrieved by combining the two GrOAWL looks were also in very good agreement (R2 > 0.85). An instrument performance model indicated the instrument wind measurement precision was likely lowered (uncertainty was increased) by a factor of ~3.3 during the flights relative to predicted ?as built? instrument performance. The reduced performance was not observed during ground-based atmospheric testing and thus has been attributed to impacts of the harsh operating conditions of the WB-57 aircraft (high vibration, thermal gradients, and high humidity). The exercise of scaling the GrOAWL instrument performance and grid scale to space showed space-based OAWL wind measurements would yield products with precision at least as good as the GrOAWL instrument. | |
publisher | American Meteorological Society | |
title | The Optical Autocovariance Wind Lidar. Part II: Green OAWL (GrOAWL) Airborne Performance and Validation | |
type | Journal Paper | |
journal volume | 35 | |
journal issue | 10 | |
journal title | Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | |
identifier doi | 10.1175/JTECH-D-18-0025.1 | |
journal fristpage | 2099 | |
journal lastpage | 2116 | |
tree | Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology:;2018:;volume 035:;issue 010 | |
contenttype | Fulltext | |