Use of Scintillations to Measure Average Wind Across a Light Beam
- 1 February 1972
- journal article
- Published by Optica Publishing Group in Applied Optics
- Vol. 11 (2) , 239-243
- https://doi.org/10.1364/ao.11.000239
Abstract
We report the successful construction and testing of an optical wind sensor that uses the motion of the scintillation pattern to measure the transverse component of wind blowing across a laser beam. As is done for measuring ionospheric and interplanetary winds, we use a correlation method. However, in our application, the slope at zero lag of the time-lagged correlogram proves to be more useful than the more commonly used delay to the peak. The reason is that, in the atmosphere, irregularities are distributed along the entire propagation path. We use a detector spacing of 0.33 of the diameter of the first Fresnel zone to obtain a nearly uniform weighting function along the path, though the center of the path is still more effective than the ends. The sensor has been used extensively over 1-km and 15-km paths, and field tests of various applications are planned.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Temporal-Frequency Spectra for a Spherical Wave Propagating through Atmospheric TurbulenceJournal of the Optical Society of America, 1971
- Theory for remote sensing of wind-velocity profilesProceedings of the IEEE, 1971
- Remote probing of atmosphere and wind velocity by millimeter wavesIEEE Transactions on Antennas and Propagation, 1970
- Weak scattering in random media, with applications to remote probingProceedings of the IEEE, 1969
- Cross-Correlation and Cross-Spectral Methods for Drift Velocity MeasurementsScience, 1968
- Interplanetary Scintillations. II ObservationsThe Astrophysical Journal, 1967
- Horizontal Movements in the IonosphereReports on Progress in Physics, 1954