Foundations for Innovative Application of Airborne Radars [electronic resource] :Measuring the Water Surface Backscattering Signature and Wind / by Alexey Nekrasov.
by Nekrasov, Alexey [author.]; SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type:
Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
G70.39-70.6 (Browse shelf) | Available | ||||
Long Loan | MAIN LIBRARY | GA102.4.R44 (Browse shelf) | Available |
Close shelf browser
QB980-991 It Came From Outer Space Wearing an RAF Blazer! | QB460-466 Radiative Processes in High Energy Astrophysics | GA1-1776 Geographic Information Science at the Heart of Europe | G70.39-70.6 Foundations for Innovative Application of Airborne Radars | GA1-1776 Historical Land Use/Land Cover Classification Using Remote Sensing | QC793-793.5 Portrait of Gunnar Källén | QC174.45-174.52 Portrait of Gunnar Källén |
Water surface backscattering and wind retrieval -- FM-CW demonstrator system as an instrument for measuring the sea surface backscattering signature and wind -- Doppler navigation system application for measuring the backscattering signature and wind over water -- Measuring the water surface backscattering signature and wind by means of the airborne weather radar -- Water-surface wind retrieval using the airborne radar altimeter -- Near-nadir wind estimation over water with the airborne precipitation radar.
The ‘wind vector’ – wind speed and direction – is a main meteorological quantity and relevant for air-sea exchange processes. This book explores the use of several airborne microwave instruments, some of which are part of standard aircraft equipment, in determining the local wind vector over water. This is worthwhile as local wind information is usually only available at measurements sites like weather stations and airports, and global wind information from satellites has very coarse resolution and poor temporal coverage – at most a few times daily. In his book, Nekrasov uses known results in a novel way and gives explicit and application-oriented descriptions how to additionally retrieve local wind information from standard airborne microwave instruments. The results presented here are highly valuable for flight operation above the sea (e.g., search-and-rescue) but also for complementing other measurements of atmospheric or oceanic parameters during research flights.
There are no comments for this item.