Field intercomparison of prevailing sonic anemometers
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Published:2018-01-12
Issue:1
Volume:11
Page:249-263
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ISSN:1867-8548
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Container-title:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Atmos. Meas. Tech.
Author:
Mauder MatthiasORCID, Zeeman Matthias J.ORCID
Abstract
Abstract. Three-dimensional sonic anemometers are the core component of eddy covariance
systems, which are widely used for micrometeorological and ecological
research. In order to characterize the measurement uncertainty of these
instruments we present and analyse the results from a field intercomparison
experiment of six commonly used sonic anemometer models from four major
manufacturers. These models include Campbell CSAT3, Gill HS-50 and R3, METEK
uSonic-3 Omni, R. M. Young 81000 and 81000RE. The experiment was conducted
over a meadow at the TERENO/ICOS site DE-Fen in southern Germany over a
period of 16 days in June of 2016 as part of the ScaleX campaign. The
measurement height was 3 m for all sensors, which were separated by 9 m
from each other, each on its own tripod, in order to limit contamination of
the turbulence measurements by adjacent structures as much as possible.
Moreover, the high-frequency data from all instruments were treated with the
same post-processing algorithm. In this study, we compare the results for
various turbulence statistics, which include mean horizontal wind speed,
standard deviations of vertical wind velocity and sonic temperature, friction
velocity, and the buoyancy flux. Quantitative measures of uncertainty, such
as bias and comparability, are derived from these results. We find that
biases are generally very small for all sensors and all computed variables,
except for the sonic temperature measurements of the two Gill sonic
anemometers (HS and R3), confirming a known transducer-temperature dependence
of the sonic temperature measurement. The best overall agreement between the
different instruments was found for the mean wind speed and the buoyancy
flux.
Funder
Helmholtz-Gemeinschaft
Publisher
Copernicus GmbH
Subject
Atmospheric Science
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