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Dive into the research topics where A. M. Weickmann is active.

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Featured researches published by A. M. Weickmann.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2001

High-Resolution Doppler Lidar for Boundary Layer and Cloud Research

Christian J. Grund; Robert M. Banta; Joanne L. George; James N. Howell; Madison J. Post; R. A. Richter; A. M. Weickmann

Abstract The high-resolution Doppler lidar (HRDL) was developed to provide higher spatial, temporal, and velocity resolution and more reliable performance than was previously obtainable with CO2-laser-based technology. The improved performance is needed to support continued advancement of boundary layer simulation models and to facilitate high-resolution turbulent flux measurements. HRDL combines a unique, eye-safe, near-IR-wavelength, solid-state laser transmitter with advanced signal processing and a high-speed scanner to achieve 30-m range resolution and a velocity precision of ∼10 cm s−1 under a variety of marine and continental boundary layer conditions, depending on atmospheric and operating conditions. An attitude-compensating scanner has been developed to facilitate shipboard marine boundary layer observations. Vertical velocities, fine details of the wind profile near the surface, turbulence kinetic energy profiles, and momentum flux are measurable with HRDL. The system is also useful for cloud s...


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2009

Doppler Lidar Estimation of Mixing Height Using Turbulence, Shear, and Aerosol Profiles

Sara Cushman Tucker; Christoph J. Senff; A. M. Weickmann; W. Alan Brewer; Robert M. Banta; Scott P. Sandberg; Daniel C. Law; R. Michael Hardesty

Abstract The concept of boundary layer mixing height for meteorology and air quality applications using lidar data is reviewed, and new algorithms for estimation of mixing heights from various types of lower-tropospheric coherent Doppler lidar measurements are presented. Velocity variance profiles derived from Doppler lidar data demonstrate direct application to mixing height estimation, while other types of lidar profiles demonstrate relationships to the variance profiles and thus may also be used in the mixing height estimate. The algorithms are applied to ship-based, high-resolution Doppler lidar (HRDL) velocity and backscattered-signal measurements acquired on the R/V Ronald H. Brown during Texas Air Quality Study (TexAQS) 2006 to demonstrate the method and to produce mixing height estimates for that experiment. These combinations of Doppler lidar–derived velocity measurements have not previously been applied to analysis of boundary layer mixing height—over the water or elsewhere. A comparison of the ...


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2011

Development and Application of a Compact, Tunable, Solid-State Airborne Ozone Lidar System for Boundary Layer Profiling

Raul J. Alvarez; Christoph J. Senff; A. O. Langford; A. M. Weickmann; Daniel C. Law; Janet L. Machol; D. A. Merritt; Richard D. Marchbanks; Scott P. Sandberg; W. A. Brewer; R. M. Hardesty; Robert M. Banta

AbstractThe National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration/Earth System Research Laboratory/Chemical Sciences Division (NOAA/ESRL/CSD) has developed a versatile, airborne lidar system for measuring ozone and aerosols in the boundary layer and lower free troposphere. The Tunable Optical Profiler for Aerosol and Ozone (TOPAZ) lidar was deployed aboard a NOAA Twin Otter aircraft during the Texas Air Quality Study (TexAQS 2006) and the California Research at the Nexus of Air Quality and Climate Change (CalNex 2010) field campaigns. TOPAZ is capable of measuring ozone concentrations in the lower troposphere with uncertainties of several parts per billion by volume at 90-m vertical and 600-m horizontal resolution from an aircraft flying at 60 m s−1. The system also provides uncalibrated aerosol backscatter profiles at 18-m vertical and 600-m horizontal resolution. TOPAZ incorporates state-of-the-art technologies, including a cerium-doped lithium calcium aluminum fluoride (Ce:LiCAF) laser, to make it compact an...


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2015

3D Volumetric Analysis of Wind Turbine Wake Properties in the Atmosphere Using High-Resolution Doppler Lidar

Robert M. Banta; Yelena L. Pichugina; W. Alan Brewer; Julie K. Lundquist; Neil Kelley; Scott P. Sandberg; Raul J. Alvarez; R. Michael Hardesty; A. M. Weickmann

AbstractWind turbine wakes in the atmosphere are three-dimensional (3D) and time dependent. An important question is how best to measure atmospheric wake properties, both for characterizing these properties observationally and for verification of numerical, conceptual, and physical (e.g., wind tunnel) models of wakes. Here a scanning, pulsed, coherent Doppler lidar is used to sample a turbine wake using 3D volume scan patterns that envelop the wake and simultaneously measure the inflow profile. The volume data are analyzed for quantities of interest, such as peak velocity deficit, downwind variability of the deficit, and downwind extent of the wake, in a manner that preserves the measured data. For the case study presented here, in which the wake was well defined in the lidar data, peak deficits of up to 80% were measured 0.6–2 rotor diameters (D) downwind of the turbine, and the wakes extended more than 11D downwind. Temporal wake variability over periods of minutes and the effects of atmospheric gusts a...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2017

Assessing State-of-the-Art Capabilities for Probing the Atmospheric Boundary Layer: The XPIA Field Campaign

Julie K. Lundquist; James M. Wilczak; Ryan Ashton; Laura Bianco; W. Alan Brewer; Aditya Choukulkar; Andrew Clifton; Mithu Debnath; Ruben Delgado; Katja Friedrich; Scott Gunter; Armita Hamidi; Giacomo Valerio Iungo; Aleya Kaushik; Branko Kosovic; Patrick Langan; Adam Lass; Evan Lavin; Joseph C. Y. Lee; Katherine McCaffrey; Rob K. Newsom; David Noone; Steven P. Oncley; Paul T. Quelet; Scott P. Sandberg; John L. Schroeder; William J. Shaw; Lynn C. Sparling; Clara St. Martin; Alexandra St. Pé

AbstractTo assess current capabilities for measuring flow within the atmospheric boundary layer, including within wind farms, the U.S. Department of Energy sponsored the eXperimental Planetary boundary layer Instrumentation Assessment (XPIA) campaign at the Boulder Atmospheric Observatory (BAO) in spring 2015. Herein, we summarize the XPIA field experiment, highlight novel measurement approaches, and quantify uncertainties associated with these measurement methods. Line-of-sight velocities measured by scanning lidars and radars exhibit close agreement with tower measurements, despite differences in measurement volumes. Virtual towers of wind measurements, from multiple lidars or radars, also agree well with tower and profiling lidar measurements. Estimates of winds over volumes from scanning lidars and radars are in close agreement, enabling the assessment of spatial variability. Strengths of the radar systems used here include high scan rates, large domain coverage, and availability during most precipita...


Applied Optics | 2009

Scanning tropospheric ozone and aerosol lidar with double-gated photomultipliers

Janet L. Machol; Richard D. Marchbanks; Christoph J. Senff; Brandi J. McCarty; Wynn L. Eberhard; William A. Brewer; R. A. Richter; Raul J. Alvarez; Daniel C. Law; A. M. Weickmann; Scott P. Sandberg

The Ozone Profiling Atmospheric Lidar is a scanning four-wavelength ultraviolet differential absorption lidar that measures tropospheric ozone and aerosols. Derived profiles from the lidar data include ozone concentration, aerosol extinction, and calibrated aerosol backscatter. Aerosol calibrations assume a clear air region aloft. Other products include cloud base heights, aerosol layer heights, and scans of particulate plumes from aircraft. The aerosol data range from 280 m to 12 km with 5 m range resolution, while the ozone data ranges from 280 m to about 1.2 km with 100 m resolution. In horizontally homogeneous atmospheres, data from multiple-elevation angles is combined to reduce the minimum altitude of the aerosol and ozone profiles to about 20 m. The lidar design, the characterization of the photomultiplier tubes, ozone and aerosol analysis techniques, and sample data are described. Also discussed is a double-gating technique to shorten the gated turn-on time of the photomultiplier tubes, and thereby reduce the detection of background light and the outgoing laser pulse.


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2017

Evaluation of Turbulence Measurement Techniques from a Single Doppler Lidar

Timothy A. Bonin; Aditya Choukulkar; W. Alan Brewer; Scott P. Sandberg; A. M. Weickmann; Yelena L. Pichugina; Robert M. Banta; Steven P. Oncley; Daniel E. Wolfe


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2016

Evaluation of single and multiple Doppler lidar techniques to measure complex flow during the XPIA field campaign

Aditya Choukulkar; W. Alan Brewer; Scott P. Sandberg; A. M. Weickmann; Timothy A. Bonin; R. Michael Hardesty; Julie K. Lundquist; Ruben Delgado; G. Valerio Iungo; Ryan Ashton; Mithu Debnath; Laura Bianco; James M. Wilczak; Steven P. Oncley; Daniel E. Wolfe


Wind Energy | 2017

Properties of the offshore low level jet and rotor layer wind shear as measured by scanning Doppler Lidar

Yelena L. Pichugina; W. A. Brewer; Robert M. Banta; Aditya Choukulkar; Christopher T. M. Clack; Melinda Marquis; Brandi J. McCarty; A. M. Weickmann; Scott P. Sandberg; R. D. Marchbanks; R. M. Hardesty


EPJ Web of Conferences | 2016

Using Ozone Lidar to Investigate Sources of High Ozone Concentrations in the Western United States

Christoph J. Senff; A. O. Langford; R. J. Alvarez; Wm. A. Brewer; Robert M. Banta; R. D. Marchbanks; Scott P. Sandberg; A. M. Weickmann; J. S. Holloway; Eric J. Williams

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Scott P. Sandberg

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Christoph J. Senff

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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R. Michael Hardesty

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Robert M. Banta

Earth System Research Laboratory

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Aditya Choukulkar

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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W. Alan Brewer

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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Richard D. Marchbanks

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Sara Cushman Tucker

University of Colorado Boulder

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Yelena L. Pichugina

Cooperative Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences

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Alan Brewer

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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