Publications
Radar meteorological applications of automatic film reading
Summary
Summary
The data recording of storm information as detected by a weather radar has been customarily made on photographic film. Research radars and an occasional U. S. Weather Bureau radar are fitted with scope cameras to record the radar plan position indicator (PPI) display. Over the past 15 years a large...
Measurement of clear air turbulence in the lower stratosphere using the Millstone Hill L-Band Radar
Summary
Summary
Radar measurements of thin turbulent layers in the clear atmosphere have been extensively reported in the literature and have recently been summarized by Hardy and Katz (1969). The majority of the thin turbulent layer detections reported have been for layers in the lower troposphere. Using the high power radar facilities...
A comparison between monostatic and bistatic scattering from rain and thin turbulent layers
Summary
Summary
Simultaneous measurements were made of the backscatter cross section and the bistatic scattering cross section of rain and thin turbulent layers. The radar measurements were made at a frequency of 1.3 GHz using the Millstone Hill Radar. The bistatic scattering measurements were made using CW transmission at 7.7 GHz with...
Monostatic and bistatic scattering from thin turbulent layers in the atmosphere
Summary
Summary
Measurements were made of the scattering properties of thin turbulent layers at and above the tropopause. The Millstone Hill L-band radar was used to measure the backscatter cross section per unit volume of these layers as a function of time and space. An X-band forward scatter link was set up...
Simultaneous radar and radiometer measurements of rain shower structure
Summary
Summary
Simultaneous measurements of the backscatter cross section per unit volume and the sky temperature were made for limited volumes of rain showers using an L-band radar and an X-band radiometer. The object of the measurements was to provide data to validate the method used to compute attenuation and sky temperature...
Rain attenuation at millimeter wavelengths
Summary
Summary
The major propagation problem confronting the use of millimeter waves for line-of-sight communication links operating through the atmosphere is hydrometeor scattering. Rain, hail, sleet, snow, and fog all can cause severe attenuation at millimeter wave frequencies. The severest problem is that of attenuation by rain. Attenuations in excess of 1...
Cooperative scattering by dielectric spheres
Summary
Summary
The problem of scattering of electromagnetic waves by a small number of closely spaced dielectric spheres is considered as a boundary value problem. The solution to this problem is obtained in a series form using partial spherical vector waves. An approximate solution is also obtained for spheres separated sufficiently far...
Coherent pulse transmission through rain
Summary
Summary
The problem of received signal degradation for coherent pulse transmission through a rain scattering volume was investigated for large bandwidth transmission at 4.0, 8.0, 15.5 and 34. 86GHz. Calculations of pulse length and total pulse energy were made for different path lengths through the rain volume. The calculations were made...
Microwave scattering parameters for New England rain
Summary
Summary
Scattergrams of attenuation coefficient, effective reflectivity factor, single-scattering albedo, and radio refractivity vs liquid-water content, rain rate, and reflectivity factor are presented for a raindrop temperature of 0.0 degrees celsius and frequencies of 1.29, 2.80, 8.0, 9.35, 15.5, 35.0, 70.0, and 94.0 GHz. The scattergrams were computed using Mie theory...