Balloon-borne pressure sensor performance evaluation utilizing tracking radars
Abstract
The pressure sensors on balloon-borne sondes relate the sonde measurements to height above the Earth's surface through the hypsometric equation. It is crucial that sondes used to explore the vertical structure of the atmosphere do not contribute significant height errors to their measurements of atmospheric constituent concentrations and properties. A series of radiosonde flights was conducted. In most cases, each flight consisted of two sondes attached to a single balloon and each flight was tracked by a highly accurate C-band radar. For the first 19 radiosonde flights, the standard aneroid cell baroswitch assembly used was the pressure sensor. The last 26 radiosondes were equipped with a premium grade aneroid cell baroswitch assembly sensor and with a hypsometer. It is shown that both aneroid cell baroswitch sensors become increasingly inaccurate with altitude. The hypsometer radar differences are not strongly dependent upon altitude and it is found that the standard deviation of the differences at 35 km is 0.179 km.
- Publication:
-
NASA STI/Recon Technical Report N
- Pub Date:
- June 1983
- Bibcode:
- 1983STIN...8334276N
- Keywords:
-
- Balloon Sounding;
- Balloon-Borne Instruments;
- Error Analysis;
- Pressure Distribution;
- Pressure Gages;
- Superpressure Balloons;
- C Band;
- Hypsometers;
- Mathematical Models;
- Meteorological Instruments;
- Tracking Radar;
- Instrumentation and Photography