Abstract

The University of Massachusetts Microwave Remote Sensing Laboratory (MIRSL) has augmented the Turbulent Eddy Profiler (TEP) with an acoustic source to implement a radio acoustic sounding system (RASS). TEP is a volume-imaging 915 MHz radar wind profiler. It can be thought of as a densely packed array of 915 MHz wind profilers sharing a common transmitter. Using digital beamforming techniques, TEP simultaneously generates over 40 contiguous beams within a 25 degree field of view. As a result, TEP provides a four-dimensional view (3D volume and time) of atmospheric turbulence structure within a volume of the boundary layer The addition of RASS capabilities to TEP allows it to measure virtual temperature. In principle, the TEP-RASS system is capable of measuring three-dimensional temperature fields. However, the horizontal resolution is limited in practice by the size of the reflected and acoustically-focused electromagnetic radiation incident on the receiving array. The authors present the TEP-RASS system implementation and an assessment of the feasibility of measuring horizontal temperature variations via RASS technique.

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