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JAWS multiple Doppler derived winds

Authors :
Elmore, Kimberly L
Source :
NASA. Langley Research Center Wind Shear(Turbulence Inputs to Flight Simulation and Systems Certification.
Publication Year :
1987
Publisher :
United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1987.

Abstract

An elementary working knowledge is given of the advantages and limitations of the multiple Doppler radar analyses that have recently become available from the Joint Airport Weather Studies (JAWS) project. What Doppler radar is and what it does is addressed and the way Doppler radars were used in the JAWS project to gather wind shear data is described. The working definition of wind shear used is winds that affect aircraft flight over a span of 15 to 45 seconds and turbulence is defined as air motion that cause abrupt aircraft motions. The JAWS data current available contain no turbulence data. The concept of multiple Doppler analysis and the geometry of how it works are described, followed by an explanation of how data gathered in radar space are interpolated to a common Cartesian coordinate system and the limitations involved. A discussion is also presented of the analysis grid and how it was constructed. What the user actually gets is discussed, followed by a discussion of the expected errors in the three orthogonal wind components. Finally, a discussion is presented of why JAWS data are significant.

Subjects

Subjects :
Meteorology And Climatology

Details

Language :
English
Database :
NASA Technical Reports
Journal :
NASA. Langley Research Center Wind Shear(Turbulence Inputs to Flight Simulation and Systems Certification
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsnas.19870015838
Document Type :
Report