Assessment of virtual towers performed with scanning wind lidars and Ka-band radars during the XPIA experiment

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Abstract

During the eXperimental Planetary boundary layer Instrumentation Assessment (XPIA) campaign, which was carried out at the Boulder Atmospheric Observatory (BAO) in spring 2015, multiple-Doppler scanning strategies were carried out with scanning wind lidars and Ka-band radars. Specifically, step-stare measurements were collected simultaneously with three scanning Doppler lidars, while two scanning Ka-band radars carried out simultaneous range height indicator (RHI) scans. The XPIA experiment provided the unique opportunity to compare directly virtual-tower measurements performed simultaneously with Ka-band radars and Doppler wind lidars. Furthermore, multiple-Doppler measurements were assessed against sonic anemometer data acquired from the meteorological tower (met-tower) present at the BAO site and a lidar wind profiler. This survey shows that-despite the different technologies, measurement volumes and sampling periods used for the lidar and radar measurements- A very good accuracy is achieved for both remote-sensing techniques for probing horizontal wind speed and wind direction with the virtual-tower scanning technique.

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Debnath, M., Valerio Iungo, G., Alan Brewer, W., Choukulkar, A., Delgado, R., Gunter, S., … Wolfe, D. (2017). Assessment of virtual towers performed with scanning wind lidars and Ka-band radars during the XPIA experiment. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 10(3), 1215–1227. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-10-1215-2017

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