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ARIES ST Radar: The First Central Himalayan Wind Profiler

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dc.contributor.author Bhattacharjee, Samaresh
dc.contributor.author Naja, Manish
dc.contributor.author Jaiswal, Aditya
dc.contributor.author Rawat, Kishan Singh
dc.contributor.author Sagar, Ram
dc.contributor.author Ananthakrishnan, S
dc.date.accessioned 2023-07-12T09:38:09Z
dc.date.available 2023-07-12T09:38:09Z
dc.date.issued 2022-12
dc.identifier.citation Journal of Astronomical Instrumentation, Vol. 11, No. 4, 2240005 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/2248/8225
dc.description Restricted Access en_US
dc.description.abstract Recently, a 206.5MHz Stratosphere Troposphere (ST) Radar system was successfully installed and made operationalized at Aryabhatta Research Institute of Observational Sciences (ARIES) (29.4N, 79.2E, 1793m amsl), Nainital, India. It is the first such unique observational facility located in the central Himalayan region and will play an important role in understanding the meteorological conditions of the region that has a vital role in atmospheric studies in South Asia. The entire ST radar system is indigenously built and installed in a compact 30m×30m×30m two-storey building, making maximum use of the available space in the hilly terrain. A metal fence of 3.5–4m height was designed and installed along the perimeter of the array to attenuate the clutter returns from the nearby mountains with the shielding efficiency 22–25dB. Since its operation, the radar has obtained useful data of neutral atmosphere, precipitation, convection, and hailstorm events for scientific research. The technical details of different sub-systems, radar integration and calibration methodology are presented here. A dedicated off-line GUI based data processing tool has been developed and is being used for the data analysis. A comparison of wind components derived from ARIES ST Radar with collocated GPS-radiosonde observations indicates a good agreement with correlation coefficients for zonal (0.92), meridional (0.76), wind speed (0.86), and wind direction (0.7). The change in wind patterns is demonstrated up to a height of about 31km amsl and the tropopause was marked to be at 16–17km on 2020 June 20. A dramatic reversal of winds from westerly (below the tropopause) to easterly (above the tropopause) was also observed. ARIES ST Radar could capture the signature of the precipitation in addition to neutral air in the same Doppler spectrum and the height of the starting point of precipitation is identified to be ∼6∼6km. This ability to detect atmospheric scattering from both neutral wind (Bragg) and precipitation (Rayleigh) in the same spectrum makes the 200MHz band radar a unique instrument in the wind profiler application for atmospheric research. en_US
dc.language.iso en en_US
dc.publisher World Scientific Publishing Company en_US
dc.relation.uri https://doi.org/10.1142/S2251171722400050
dc.rights © World Scientific Publishing Company
dc.subject Radar en_US
dc.subject Antenna array en_US
dc.subject Digital signal processing en_US
dc.subject Clutter en_US
dc.subject Doppler en_US
dc.subject Wind profiler en_US
dc.title ARIES ST Radar: The First Central Himalayan Wind Profiler en_US
dc.type Article en_US


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