A Comparison of Wind Speed Data from Mechanical and Ultrasonic AnemometersThis study compared the performance of mechanical and ultrasonic anemometers at the Eastern Range (ER; Kennedy Space Center and Cape Canaveral Air Force Station on Florida's Atlantic coast) and the Western Range (WR; Vandenberg Air Force Base on California's Pacific coast). Launch Weather Officers, forecasters, and Range Safety analysts need to understand the performance of wind sensors at the ER and WR for weather warnings, watches, advisories, special ground processing operations, launch pad exposure forecasts, user Launch Commit Criteria (LCC) forecasts and evaluations, and toxic dispersion support. The current ER and WR weather tower wind instruments are being changed from the current propeller-and-vane (ER) and cup-and-vane (WR) sensors to ultrasonic sensors through the Range Standardization and Automation (RSA) program. The differences between mechanical and ultrasonic techniques have been found to cause differences in the statistics of peak wind speed in previous studies. The 45th Weather Squadron (45 WS) and the 30th Weather Squadron (30 WS) requested the Applied Meteorology Unit (AMU) to compare data between RSA and current sensors to determine if there are significant differences. Approximately 3 weeks of Legacy and RSA wind data from each range were used in the study, archived during May and June 2005. The ER data spanned the full diurnal cycle, while the WR data was confined to 1000-1600 local time. The sample of 1-minute data from numerous levels on 5 different towers on each range totaled more than 500,000 minutes of data (482,979 minutes of data after quality control). The 10 towers were instrumented at several levels, ranging from 12 ft to 492 ft above ground level. The RSA sensors were collocated at the same vertical levels as the present sensors and typically within 15 ft horizontally of each another. Data from a total of 53 RSA ultrasonic sensors, collocated with present sensors were compared. The 1-minute average wind speed/direction and the 1-second peak wind speed/direction were compared.
Document ID
20120003623
Acquisition Source
Kennedy Space Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Short, D. (ENSCO, Inc. Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Wells, L. (Weather Squadron (30th) San Francisco, CA, United States)
Merceret, F. (NASA Kennedy Space Center Cocoa Beach, FL, United States)
Roeder, W. P. (Weather Squadron (45th) Patrick AFB, FL, United States)
Date Acquired
August 25, 2013
Publication Date
October 14, 2006
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Report/Patent Number
KSC-2006-096Report Number: KSC-2006-096
Meeting Information
Meeting: 2006 National Weather Association Annual Meeting