Paper
12 August 2009 The balloon ring: a high-performance low-cost instrumentation platform for measuring atmospheric turbulence profiles
Demos T. Kyrazis, Frank D. Eaton, Don G. Black, Wiley T. Black, Alastair Black
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
Balloons, similar to those used for meteorological observations, are commonly used to carry a small instrumentation package for measuring optical turbulence in the atmosphere as a function of altitude. Two temperature sensors, one meter apart, measure a single point of the temperature structure function. The raw data is processed to provided the value of CT2, and the results transmitted to a ground receiving site. These data are converted to the index of refraction structure constant, Cn2. The validity of these measurements depend on the correctness of a number of assumptions. These include local isotropy of the turbulence and the existence of the Kolmogorov inertial subrange, and that the data is not contaminated by the wake of the ascending balloon. A variety of experiments on other platforms, and in the laboratory, demonstrate that the assumptions upon which these balloon measurements are made are not valid for a large percentage of the above described flights. In order to collect data whose interpretation did not require preconceived assumptions, the balloon ring instrumentation system was developed. The ring is 8.69 meters in diameter, with a cross-sectional diameter of 14 cm. The ring is hung just below the balloon, so that the wake goes through the center of the ring, and the sensors are mounted tangent to the circumference of the ring. The raw data is transmitted to the ground with a bandwidth extending to 1.25 kHz. A sample of the measurements taken during a flight at Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif. is presented.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Demos T. Kyrazis, Frank D. Eaton, Don G. Black, Wiley T. Black, and Alastair Black "The balloon ring: a high-performance low-cost instrumentation platform for measuring atmospheric turbulence profiles", Proc. SPIE 7463, Atmospheric Optics: Models, Measurements, and Target-in-the-Loop Propagation III, 746308 (12 August 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.827540
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Cited by 12 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Turbulence

Optical spheres

Atmospheric modeling

Atmospheric optics

Temperature metrology

Optical turbulence

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