Remote Sensing (Sep 2020)
Doppler Aerosol WiNd (DAWN) Lidar during CPEX 2017: Instrument Performance and Data Utility
Abstract
During 25 May–24 June 2017, NASA’s Doppler Aerosol WiNd (DAWN) lidar was flown on board a NASA DC-8 aircraft as part of the Convective Processes EXperiment (CPEX) airborne campaign based out of Ft. Lauderdale, FL. Central to DAWN’s deployment was the goal of obtaining high time and spatial resolution wind velocity measurements, particularly with respect to the convective life cycle. We describe the processes involved in deriving wind profiles from DAWN observations and evaluate the performance of DAWN in terms of data coverage, resolution and frequency. Comparisons with dropsonde wind measurements show an overall low bias of 2 > 0.92 for both u and v components for the data set as a whole (over 160 comparisons). From this CPEX experience, we find that the DAWN wind profiles are of high precision, ~30 m vertical resolution and with horizontal spacing as fine as 3–7 km, and rival dropsondes for horizontal wind coverage (aerosols and clouds permitting). Case studies illustrate the benefit of using the DAWN to investigate and characterize the dynamics of the tropical atmosphere over open ocean waters in conditions ranging from undisturbed to active convection.
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