A study of meteor radar winds from two locations in the British Isles
1995
Abstract Winds and tides have been measured by a two-station meteor radar system which has increased spatial resolution compared with single station radars used in the past. Narrow radar beams, pointing SW from Sheffield (53.5°N, 1.6°W) and 30°N of W from Shrivenham (51.5°N, 1.6°W), are arranged to converge over the U.K. MST radar site near Aberystwyth, thus defining a unique atmospheric volume in which meteor wind components are simultaneously measured from the two radar sites. The resultant ‘true’, or local, wind vector is compared with the spatially averaged vector obtained with the aid of beams pointing SW and NW from Sheffield only. It is found that the ‘true’ and averaged tidal winds are in good agreement, as expected from their large scale sizes, and that the main advantages of the dual station technique lie in the resolution of a small scale structure such as that related to internal atmospheric gravity waves. By the simultaneous deployment of two-station meteor radar, MST radar and LIDAR, such waves may now be studied through a large vertical section of the atmosphere in a geographically localized area.
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