Met Research Unit, Cardington
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By: James McGregor |
NB: | The inclusion in this document of the name of a company does not constitute any endorsement or recommendation by the Met Office of that company's products or services. |
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Cardington airship hangars (with instrumented 10m mast in foreground) |
2. Instrumentation
This section outlines the instrumentation deployed on the site. More detailed technical descriptions of
some of the instruments are available by clicking on the links.
2.1 Wind and turbulence measurement
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Ultrasonic anemometer mounted at the top of the 25m mast. (Also present: temperature and humidity sensors inside aspirated screens) |
2.2 Temperature measurement
2.3 Humidity measurement
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This picture shows the LI-COR LI-7500 gas analyser co-located with a sonic anemometer, on the 10m tower. |
2.4 Radiation measurement
The surface site consists of a full suite of radiometers, measuring all the main components of the radiation
budget:-
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Above: Radiometers mounted on a Kipp & Zonen solar tracker.
Right: Downward-facing pyrgeometer at end of boom, and Heitronics IRT pointing at the ground. |
A number of sub-soil sensors are deployed. These sensors are situated at
two different locations in the Cardington field site (designated the "west" site and the "south" site.):-
The three sonic anemometers are logged at a rate of 10Hz on a PC running windows XP, using software
developed in-house. The other sensors that are mounted on the 10,25 and 50m masts are connected to the analogue
inputs of the anemometers and are logged in the same data streams. Data from the 25m and 50m sonics is
transmitted to the logging PC, via pairs of radio modems.
All the remaining sensors are logged using three commercially available
dataTaker (www.datataker.com)
DT800 loggers. The loggers use a raw sampling rate of 0.5 Hz, and one minute averaged data is
logged. Another PC running windows XP interrogates these loggers at regular intervals, and downloads the data
from them.
2.5 Visibility & aerosol measurements
2.6 Sub-soil sensors
2.7 Miscellaneous sensors
3. Data Logging
The overall structure of the logging system is illustrated in this schematic diagram.
4. Data Processing
The data processing routines output three files per day. These contain data averaged over time periods of
1 minute, 10 minutes and 30 minutes respectively. The 10 and 30 minute datasets include turbulence quantities.
Last Modified:- 4 September 2006
By:- james.mcgregor@metoffice.gov.uk