Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)

Two types of temperature sensors are designed and tested: a thermocouple and a fine wire resistance thermometer. The intention of this study is to figure out which kind of measurement principle is in general more suited for atmospheric boundary layer meteorology with small remotely piloted aircraft...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: N. Wildmann, M. Mauz, J. Bange
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Copernicus Publications 2013-08-01
Series:Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
Online Access:http://www.atmos-meas-tech.net/6/2101/2013/amt-6-2101-2013.pdf
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spelling doaj-19ca4ba4a12c4f94a0e6dfbdadc70a432020-11-24T22:21:35ZengCopernicus PublicationsAtmospheric Measurement Techniques1867-13811867-85482013-08-01682101211310.5194/amt-6-2101-2013Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)N. WildmannM. MauzJ. BangeTwo types of temperature sensors are designed and tested: a thermocouple and a fine wire resistance thermometer. The intention of this study is to figure out which kind of measurement principle is in general more suited for atmospheric boundary layer meteorology with small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA). The sensors are calibrated in a NIST traceable climate chamber and validated in flight against tower measurements, radiosondes and remote sensing. The sensors have a measurement range of at least −10–50 °C, an absolute RMS error of less than ±0.2 K which is stable over the lifetime of the sensors, and a resolution of about 0.01 K. Both devices are tested for typical errors like radiation error and adiabatic heating, as well as for their dynamic response. Spectral resolutions of up to approximately 10 Hz can be obtained with both sensors, which makes them suitable for turbulence measurement. Their low cost of less than 100 EUR in pure hardware is a major advantage for research with small RPA.http://www.atmos-meas-tech.net/6/2101/2013/amt-6-2101-2013.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author N. Wildmann
M. Mauz
J. Bange
spellingShingle N. Wildmann
M. Mauz
J. Bange
Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)
Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
author_facet N. Wildmann
M. Mauz
J. Bange
author_sort N. Wildmann
title Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)
title_short Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)
title_full Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)
title_fullStr Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)
title_full_unstemmed Two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA)
title_sort two fast temperature sensors for probing of the atmospheric boundary layer using small remotely piloted aircraft (rpa)
publisher Copernicus Publications
series Atmospheric Measurement Techniques
issn 1867-1381
1867-8548
publishDate 2013-08-01
description Two types of temperature sensors are designed and tested: a thermocouple and a fine wire resistance thermometer. The intention of this study is to figure out which kind of measurement principle is in general more suited for atmospheric boundary layer meteorology with small remotely piloted aircraft (RPA). The sensors are calibrated in a NIST traceable climate chamber and validated in flight against tower measurements, radiosondes and remote sensing. The sensors have a measurement range of at least −10–50 °C, an absolute RMS error of less than ±0.2 K which is stable over the lifetime of the sensors, and a resolution of about 0.01 K. Both devices are tested for typical errors like radiation error and adiabatic heating, as well as for their dynamic response. Spectral resolutions of up to approximately 10 Hz can be obtained with both sensors, which makes them suitable for turbulence measurement. Their low cost of less than 100 EUR in pure hardware is a major advantage for research with small RPA.
url http://www.atmos-meas-tech.net/6/2101/2013/amt-6-2101-2013.pdf
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