15th Conference on Aviation, Range, and Aerospace Meteorology

9.5

Quality Control Algorithms and Proposed Integration Process for Wind Profilers Used by Launch Vehicle Systems

Ryan K. Decker, NASA/MSFC, Huntsville, AL; and R. E. Barbre Jr.

This paper presents the quality control (QC) process used by the Marshall Space Flight Center Natural Environments Branch (MSFC NE) to develop an archive of data from the Kennedy Space Center (KSC) 50-MHz Doppler Radar Wind Profiler (DRWP) which will be used to support analyses of vehicle wind loads and in the computation of steering commands. An extensive QC process was applied to 50-MHz DRWP data to remove spurious data caused by various forms of atmospheric and non-atmospheric artifacts. The 50-MHz DRWP archive has been built to eliminate sample-size limitations of currently used databases, which were derived from weather balloon observations. The archive contains wind profiles from approximately 2.7-18.6 km altitude at roughly five minute intervals for the August 1997 to December 2009 period of record, and has been used to produce subset databases of wind pairs, triplets, and sextuplets which contain approximately 100 times as the number of samples available from the MSFC NE balloon databases. These subset databases are currently being used by the National Aeronautics and Astronautics loads and trajectory design community. By greatly increasing the sample size of near-continuous wind profile measurements, this work will increase launch availability by reducing wind change uncertainties during launch countdown, thus reducing the amount of conservatism necessary for calculating appropriate safety margins. A similar QC process is currently being implemented on the KSC 915-MHz DRWP network, which will provide data from near the surface to the lowest altitude of the 50-MHz DRWP data. In addition to presenting the 50-MHz DRWP QC process, this paper outlines a proposed procedure to utilize data from both the 50-MHz and 915-MHz DRWPs to generate integrated wind profiles over the expanded altitude range from near surface to 18.6 km.

Session 9, Range, Aerospace, and Environmental Meteorology
Wednesday, 3 August 2011, 10:45 AM-12:00 PM, Imperial Suite ABC

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