Short-Wavelength Technology and the Potential For Distributed Networks of Small Radar Systems

David McLaughlin
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David Pepyne
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V. Chandrasekar
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Brenda Philips
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James Kurose
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Michael Zink
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Kelvin Droegemeier
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Sandra Cruz-Pol
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Francesc Junyent
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Jerald Brotzge
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David Westbrook
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Nitin Bharadwaj
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Yanting Wang
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Eric Lyons
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Kurt Hondl
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Yuxiang Liu
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Eric Knapp
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Ming Xue
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Anthony Hopf
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Kevin Kloesel
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Alfred DeFonzo
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Pavlos Kollias
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Keith Brewster
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Robert Contreras
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Brenda Dolan
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Theodore Djaferis
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Edin Insanic
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Stephen Frasier
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Frederick Carr
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Dense networks of short-range radars capable of mapping storms and detecting atmospheric hazards are described. Composed of small X-band (9.4 GHz) radars spaced tens of kilometers apart, these networks defeat the Earth curvature blockage that limits today s long-range weather radars and enables observing capabilities fundamentally beyond the operational state-of-the-art radars. These capabilities include multiple Doppler observations for mapping horizontal wind vectors, subkilometer spatial resolution, and rapid-update (tens of seconds) observations extending from the boundary layer up to the tops of storms. The small physical size and low-power design of these radars permits the consideration of commercial electronic manufacturing approaches and radar installation on rooftops, communications towers, and other infrastructure elements, leading to cost-effective network deployments. The networks can be architected in such a way that the sampling strategy dynamically responds to changing weather to simultaneously accommodate the data needs of multiple types of end users. Such networks have the potential to supplement, or replace, the physically large long-range civil infrastructure radars in use today.

University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts

Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

University of Puerto Rico, Mayagiiez, Puerto Rico

National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma

McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: David Pepyne, University of Massachusetts, 151 Holdsworth Way, Amherst, MA 01003, E-mail: pepyne@ecs.umass.edu

Dense networks of short-range radars capable of mapping storms and detecting atmospheric hazards are described. Composed of small X-band (9.4 GHz) radars spaced tens of kilometers apart, these networks defeat the Earth curvature blockage that limits today s long-range weather radars and enables observing capabilities fundamentally beyond the operational state-of-the-art radars. These capabilities include multiple Doppler observations for mapping horizontal wind vectors, subkilometer spatial resolution, and rapid-update (tens of seconds) observations extending from the boundary layer up to the tops of storms. The small physical size and low-power design of these radars permits the consideration of commercial electronic manufacturing approaches and radar installation on rooftops, communications towers, and other infrastructure elements, leading to cost-effective network deployments. The networks can be architected in such a way that the sampling strategy dynamically responds to changing weather to simultaneously accommodate the data needs of multiple types of end users. Such networks have the potential to supplement, or replace, the physically large long-range civil infrastructure radars in use today.

University of Massachusetts, Amherst, Amherst, Massachusetts

Colorado State University, Fort Collins, Colorado

University of Oklahoma, Norman, Oklahoma

University of Puerto Rico, Mayagiiez, Puerto Rico

National Severe Storms Laboratory, Norman, Oklahoma

McGill University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: David Pepyne, University of Massachusetts, 151 Holdsworth Way, Amherst, MA 01003, E-mail: pepyne@ecs.umass.edu
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