turbulence layers detection from ground-based rayleigh lidar alain hauchecorne 1, and the mmedtac...

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Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1 , and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1 , Francis Dalaudier 1 , Jacques Porteneuve 1 , Thierry Gaudo 2 , Richard Wilson 1 , Claire Cénac 1 , Christian Laqui 1 , Philippe Keckhut 1 , Jean-Marie Perrin 3 , Agnès Dolfi 2 , Nicolas Cézard 2 , Laurent Lombard 2 , Claudine Besson 2 1 LATMOS/IPSL, UVSQ, CNRS-INSU, Guyancourt, France, [email protected] 2 ONERA/DOTA, Palaiseau, France 3 OHP, CNRS-INSU, Saint-Michel l’Observatoire, France

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Page 1: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh

lidarAlain Hauchecorne1, and the MMEDTAC Team

Charles Cot1, Francis Dalaudier1, Jacques Porteneuve1, Thierry Gaudo2, Richard Wilson1,

Claire Cénac1, Christian Laqui1, Philippe Keckhut1, Jean-Marie Perrin3, Agnès Dolfi2,

Nicolas Cézard2, Laurent Lombard2, Claudine Besson2

1 LATMOS/IPSL, UVSQ, CNRS-INSU, Guyancourt, France, [email protected]

2ONERA/DOTA, Palaiseau, France

3OHP, CNRS-INSU, Saint-Michel l’Observatoire, France

Page 2: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Clear air turbulence

Clear air turbulence (CAT) is an important problem for safety of commercial airplanes:• It can cause severe passenger injuries and material damages • It is not easy to detect in advance on-board by radar or other methods

Cleair air turbulence is related to small-scale wind and air density fluctuations but its characteristics and mechanisms of formation are not well known.

European projects EU-FP6 Flysafe (2005-2009), coord. Thales: to propose new methods to improve aircraft safetyEU-FP7 DELICAT (2009-2012), coord. Thales: to develop a lidar prototype to detect CAT on board aircrafts

Page 3: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

TAC Cases reported

• From 1981 through 1997 there were 342 reports of turbulence affecting major air carriers

• Three passengers died, two of these fatalities were not wearing their seat belt while the sign was on

• 80 suffered serious injuries, 73 of these passengers were also not wearing their seat belts.

Page 4: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Turbulence generation

3 main causes- Wind shear

- Convection

- Orographic waves

Page 5: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

MMEDTAC ANR Project (2006-2009)

2 methods proposed - Monostatic Rayleigh lidar: density

fluctuations in aerosol-free atmosphere, implemented within MMEDTAC

- Doppler Wind Rayleigh lidar: wind fluctuations

Objectives- To set-up a ground-based lidar system to detect CAT

- To improve and test algorithms developed in EU-DELICAT for the detection of CAT using lidar signals.

Page 6: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Rayleigh density lidar

Accuracy

phN

1

Advantages

Easy to realise and operate

Limitations

Aerosol scattering must be negligible or need high resolution spectral filter

Page 7: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Detection of turbulent fluctuations

For isotropic fluctuations

NgV

TT

/

Troposphere: g/N=1000ms-1

=1% ~ V=10ms-1

Stratosphere g/N=500ms-1

=1% ~ V=5ms-1

Page 8: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Detection based on variance of density fluctuations

Background removal (average signal from high altitude)

: integrated signal in time slice i and altitude layer j

Perturbation

Variance

Pi, j =Si, j −

1

2(Si, j−1 + Si, j+1)

1

2Si, j +

1

4(Si, j−1 + Si, j+1)€

Si, j

V j =1

NiPi, j −

1

2(Pi−1 + Pi+1)

⎝ ⎜

⎠ ⎟2

i

Page 9: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Field campaign at Observatoire de Haute-Provence (OHP)

Use of NDACC Rayleigh temperature lidar at OHP

•Dedicated reception telescope (53 cm diameter)

•2 channels at 532 nm (parallel and perpendicular polarizations (detection solid particles)

•Distance emission-reception 6m to avoid PM saturation at low altitude

•Dedicated data acquisition chain

• Shot by shot acquisition at 50 Hz

• Detection in analogic mode

• Sampling 15 m (100 ns), resolution 37.5m (4 MHz)

Page 10: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Laser Nd-Yag - 15W @ 532 nm

E=4. 1019 ph/s

2=0.5

Qlid=0.01 to 0.1

A=0.5 m2 (80 cm diameter)

z=10000 m

r=4. 10-7 m-1sr-1

N=12000/s to 120000/s

Estimated signal with OHP Rayleigh lidar

Page 11: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Detectivity limit with Rayleigh OHP lidarfor 10km altitude

Page 12: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Observed variance

Lidar one hour average Nearby ST radar

Page 13: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

23 Jun 2009 22h-23h

Observed variance averaged during one hourMMEDTAC campaign –23/06/2009

Page 14: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Radar PROUST 11.5 à 15 km, Dole et al., 2001 :CT

2 = 0.3 à 0.6.10-3

Estimation turbulence parameters

Page 15: Turbulence layers detection from ground-based Rayleigh lidar Alain Hauchecorne 1, and the MMEDTAC Team Charles Cot 1, Francis Dalaudier 1, Jacques Porteneuve

Conclusion

• A new lidar system has been set-up at OHP to detect clear air turbulence from Rayleigh scattering fluctuations

• Analysis of the results indicate the probable detection of CAT layers

• Derived turbulent parameters in the same range than ST radar estimations

• This technique offer a new tool for atmospheric studies