Abstract
There is a strong national interest in the observation of ocean surface winds with high spatial and temporal resolution for understanding tropical cyclones and their effects on weather and climate and in forecasting storms making landfall. Current satellite and aircraft based remote sensing capability is limited in wind speed dynamic range and in the ability to retrieve wind information in the presence of rain, or in temporal and spatial coverage, respectively. The hurricane imaging radiometer (HIRAD) is capable to capture all the hurricane features and dynamics from a high altitude aircraft preserving high resolution measurements. A detailed description of the methods used in simulating the HIRAD instrument surface sampling of wind speed, in intense rain, from various aircraft platforms with realistic operational flight patterns through a time evolving hurricane will be provided in this paper. A noise model used to simulate the effects of rain for various observation path lengths over the swath will also be described. Results will demonstrate the extent of spatial and temporal coverage available from currently available aircraft platforms.
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