ITU-R REPORT M 2013-1997 Wind Profiler Radars《风力测绘雷达》.pdf
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1、REPORT ITU-R M.2013 WIND PROFILER RADARS (1997) 1 General subject matter 1.1 Introduction Wind profiler radars are radio systems which can be very helpful in weather forecasting applications. To be able to make use of the benefits of wind profiler radars, suitable radio frequency bands need to be id
2、entified for the accommodation of this type of system. One must note the existence of acoustic wind profilers (Doppler SODARs). They can be used to complement certain wind profiler radar measurements at very low altitudes. However, we stress that Doppler SODARs cannot be used as a substitute for win
3、d profiler radars. On the one hand, radar systems for weather forecasting purposes are to be accommodated in the frequency allocations of the radiolocation service and/or the meteorological aids service. Existing uses in these bands need to be protected and compatibility with the services in the adj
4、acent bands has to be assured. On the other hand, accommodation in the fiequency bands of other radio services could be considered, if this is acceptable fiom a frequency-sharing point of view. For the identification of the various compatibility and/or sharing options, a clear understanding of the c
5、oncept of wind profiler radar systems and their behaviour in the electromagnetic environment is needed. In the following paragraphs the need for wind profiler radars will be touched upon and a general system description will be given including the typical electromagnetic behaviour. 1.2 User requirem
6、ents for wind profiler radar data The development of weather forecasting presently requires frequent, closely spaced and high quality wind data with improved accuracy from near the Earths surface to high in the atmosphere. Wind data based principally on balloon borne instruments, satellite measureme
7、nts and automated aircraft reporting systems are insufficient to satisfj the needs of the increasingly high resolution atmospheric computer models as well as those on man-machine interactive forecasting systems. Without substantial increases in high resolution wind data, the capacity of these new mo
8、dels and interactive systems being deployed later this decade to improve weather forecasts and severe weather warnings will be greatly limited. Planetary numerical models of the atmosphere which produce three to ten day forecasts require upper air data from extensive areas of the globe. Especially i
9、n remote areas, wind profiler radars operating unattended may offer a means of obtaining essential high altitude data for these models from data sparse areas. Numerical models for forecasts fiom 3 to 48 h covering a continent or smaller area require data from a large vertical extent of the atmospher
10、e, typically from 200 m to 18 km, with vertical resolution of approximately 250 m depending on the application. The time resolution presently needed is for hourly data. For very short-term weather forecasting, air pollution monitoring, wind field analyses and forecasts of toxic. plume trajectories r
11、esulting fiom chemical or nuclear incidents, severe weather warnings for aviation, meteorological observations, airport operations and public protection, meteorologists need wind information with a very high temporal and spatial resolution, mainly in the lower atmosphere. The requirements are for co
12、ntinuous data acquisition, between the ground and 5 km, with a desirable resolution sometimes as low as 30 m. Measurements will usually be made in populated areas. STDmITU-R RECMN M-2013-ENGL 1997 4855232 0535482 Lb8 = 2 Rep. ITU-R M.2013 Wind profiler radars also play an important role in experimen
13、tal atmospheric research. Their ability to measure wind with a high temporal and spatial resolution makes them very well suited for the experimental verification of models, for boundary layer research and for the investigation of processes that are important for understanding the atmosphere, includi
14、ng climate evolution. At present meteorological organizations use balloon borne systems to measure profiles of wind, temperature and humidity from the ground to high in the atmosphere. While current wind profiler radars do not operationally measure all of these parameters, they do have several advan
15、tages in comparison to the balloon based systems in meeting the above- mentioned requirements: - they sample winds nearly continuously; - the winds are measured almost directly above the site; - the vertical air velocity can be measured; - they provide the temporal and spatial density soundings need
16、ed to compute derived fields in a much more timely manner; - - the cost per observation is lower; they operate unattended in nearly all weather conditions. In addition, it has been demonstrated that wind profiler radars can be adapted to measure temperature profiles when they are used in conjunction
17、 with a radio-acoustic sounding system (RASS). This opens the possibility to obtain denser and higher quality temperature profiles compared to present measurement techniques such as balloon tracking. No other measurement technique will present comparable advantages in the near future, including sate
18、llite borne sensors. The World Meteorological Organization has expressed the need to operate such radars as a matter of urgency, due to the necessity of better monitoring and forecasting of the Earths atmosphere. A standardization of operating frequency bands is most important for the weather servic
19、es in order to build an operational network in a practical and cost-effective manner. 1.3 System concept of wind profiler radars Wind profiler radars are vertically directed pulsed Doppler radars capable of analysing the back-scattered signals to determine the velocity of air along the beams. By ste
20、ering the beams typically 15“ from zenith, the horizontal and vertical components of the air motion can be obtained. Wind profiler radars depend on signals scattered from gradients in the radio refractive index associated with turbulent eddies with scales of one-half the radar wavelength (Bragg reso
21、nance). Hydrometeor scattering may also contribute or even dominate the returned signals, depending on the radar operating frequency. The goal of detecting the very weak clear air signals dictates the use of long coherent dwell times, low-noise system design, low antenna side lobes, and careful atte
22、ntion to siting, and potential interference. A related development, the RASS provides profiles of temperature, typically with no alteration of the radio emission characteristics of the wind profiler radar. The propagation velocity of a Bragg-matched acoustic signal, which is related to the air tempe
23、rature, is measured by the wind profiler radar using slightly different Doppler processing. The nature of the scattering mechanism requires wind profiler radars to function between 40 and 1400 MHz. As frequency increases over 1300 MHz, performance of the wind profiler radar decreases significantly.
24、The choice of operating frequency is influenced by the required altitude coverage and resolution. 1.4 Radiation aspects of wind profiler radar systems In practice, systems are built for three frequency bands, i.e. around 50 MHz, 400 MHz, and 1 O00 MHz, and these systems typically operate in two mode
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