Research and Development
YES
and the Small Business Innovative Research (SBIR) Program (323K PDF
File)
YES' mission is to develop high quality environmental and laboratory
instrumentation to measure weather conditions in all regimes: on the
ground, in the air, and on board ships. These measurements cover the
spectrum of "mud to sun", that is, from soil moisture, through
temperature, humidity, radiation and clouds, all the way up to space
weather sensors. Yankee engineers and scientists have worked together
with seven different Federal Agencies and hundreds of customers in
developing its product line of environmental sensors. Ongoing R&D projects involve
these areas:
Dropsonde - NOAA
The US Department Of Commerce (National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration) has funded YES to develop a low cost dropsonde, suitable
for use on Unmanned Aerial Vehicles (UAVs) over data sparse regions.
These disposable weather stations are released from a high altitude will
measure and telemeter conditions from the release platform down to the
water. They will provide NOAA with critical real time data to drive
numerical weather prediction models to set their initial conditions. In
areas such as the eastern pacific, little data is take and the accuracy
of weather forecasts in the western US suffer. Ultimately, NOAA's GUPS
concept plans to fly a small network of UAVs to disperse dropsondes
across the Pacific Ocean on a periodic basis. Improvements to mesoscale
weather model accuracy could provide wide ranging economic and safety
benefits to the entire planet.
Nighttime Cloud Imager - USAF
The US Department Of Defense (US Air Force ) has funded YES to develop a
nighttime version f its Total Sky Imager to support operational
requirements of Space Weather operations. By observing clouds in all
weather conditions at night, these detectors can automatically determine
whether auroral or air glow emissions caused by solar storms or
"space weather" are occluded. Solar-induced electromagnetic
disturbances are a critical factor in the accuracy of GPS-guided
munitions, and often the performance of GPS propagation is questionable.
This technology therefore has the potential to save lives of
non-combatants in times of conflict. Beyond military applications,
another important application area is nighttime airport landing and
takeoff safety.
Deployable Micro Weather Station - US Navy
The US Department Of Defense (US Navy) has funded YES to develop a
miniature, low cost weather sensor for use in Naval operations. This
surface based sensor makes automated pressure, temperature, humidity and
wind measurements and automatically telemeters them via low earth
orbiting satellite. It can be dropped in ahead of troops or placed
semi-permanently for longer deployments. It has important civilian
applications involving homeland defense and wildland fire weather
prediction.
Doppler Lidar - US Navy
The US Department Of Defense (US Navy) has funded YES to develop a Fiber
Optic Doppler Lidar for remote sensing of wind speed and direction.
Operating in the intrinsically eye-safe and invisible 1.5mm near
infrared (NIR) region, its solid state laser diode source and
erbium-doped fiber amplifier provides reliable, continuous service at
remote locations. Imagine being able to make real time wind profile
measurements to hundreds of meters without the expense of installing and
maintaining a meteorological tower. Total
Doppler Lidar
Automated Radiosonde Launcher - NOAA
The US Department of Commerce (National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration) has funded YES to develop Automated
Radiosonde Launcher technology operate in remote locations or when
unattended upper air wind/PTU observations are desired. The launcher is a robust
system that automates radiosonde observations. Because the ARL
automates every step in the launch process it frees personnel to perform
more important value-added tasks, and virtually eliminates human errors.
At remote sites, it reduces exposure of personnel to hazardous and/or
undesirable environmental conditions.
Automated Precipitation Collector - NOAA
The US Department Of Commerce (National Oceanic and Atmospheric
Administration) has funded YES to develop a Total
Precipitation Collector. It consists of a wet deposition bucket that
is normally covered by a motor operated lid during non-precipitation
events. The user periodically visits the system to recover its
precipitation sample bag for lab analysis. A next-generation,
CPU-controlled precipitation sensor controls the open/closed decision.
The TPC-3100 Opti-Grid precipitation sensor represents a major improvement over
older sampler technology where the earliest light precipitation events
were often missed. Often the earliest phases of a precipitation event
contain the highest concentrations, and this historical lack of
sensitivity has biased sampling.
Wind-Powered Refrigeration - US Dept. of Energy
The National Renewable Energy Lab, a branch of the US Department Of
Energy has funded
YES to develop an innovative wind-powered refrigeration system. Much
like clean drinking water was a major issue two decades ago for
villages, reliable refrigeration (or ice) remains a need of most of the
third world. The availability of refrigeration is in great demand both
in terms of public health and for standard of living reasons. However
high electrical energy costs and lack of distribution infrastructure
keeps a refrigerator of the reach of most of the world's
population.
If ice could be produced for free (or nearly free) for example, many
of the world's fishing villages could then successfully transport the
fish they harvest to market and convert it to hard currency. An
obvious solution is to develop a renewable energy-based system to power
refrigeration on a large, "village-wide" scale, much like
shared water wells are setup today around the world. Everywhere but in
the desert, wind handedly beats solar power in
energy-recovered-per-invested-dollar. However, because wind availability
generally tends to be erratic in most parts of the world, it is
difficult to efficiently couple the needs of a static refrigeration
cycle to a wind turbine. YES engineers are developing an adaptive
electronic load-matching charge management system that will permit a
large-scale commercial ice machine to be directly connected to a
>10kW tower-mounted wind turbine.
Improved Solid State UV detection technology
YES is working with a private industry partner to develop and
optically test a new breed of band-gap limited solid state UV-B
detectors that have the potential to reduce the sensitivity to OOB
(visible) light vs. existing SiC and GaP and GaN technologies. We expect
to utilize these detectors in future field and space-based UV
radiometers.
Image Processing
Knowledge of cloud cover is an essential meteorological parameter.
Clouds play a major role in the energy balance and direction of weather
patterns. Until recently, human observers were required to make hourly
observations of sky conditions at airports and meteorological stations.
The inherent subjectivity of this method produced results that varied
widely from observer to observer. In response to this requirement YES
introduced the Total Sky Imager, a result of a 1994 USDA Phase II SBIR
R&D program. The automated TSI-880 takes digital pictures of the
sky, which are analyzed via image processing algorithms to support
weather prediction models and forecasting. Current research involves new
and improved image processing algorithms for extracting useful data
products from present weather images such as winds aloft. The goal is to
reduce the dependency on radiosondes for winds and to support the US
Federal Aviation Administration's requirement for improved cloud cover
and visibility measurements at airports via improved aviation
meteorology.
Optical Calibration
Every instrument requires some method of calibration - this is a basic
tenet of the field of metrology. Optical calibration of radiometers
involves the conversion of the raw analog signal from the detector into
engineering units that the user can interpret. In calibrating a
radiometer each of the following parameters can influence the output of
an instrument:
- angle of incidence from the source (cosine response),
- presence of strong out of bandwidth (OOB) energy,
- spectral response,
- overall absolute or "voltage sensitivity" response - the
detectivity can change over both time and exposure,
- local ambient temperature, and
- mechanical vibration
Thus, in outdoor measurement of atmospheric radiation, accurately
characterizing the output that an optical sensor produces in terms of
irradiance (W/m2) or spectral irradiance (W/m2-nm) is a particularly
difficult challenge. Moreover, moving radiometers from the field to
standards labs has the potential to lead to damage or calibration
shifts. Optical irradiance calibrations of radiometers in the field,
traditionally restricted to indoor optical facilities like at NIST, the
PTB or NPL can now be made using our new portable SQM-5002
lamp standard. With its precision power supply and thermally stabilized
housing, it represents the state-of-the-art in uniform flux irradiance
sources. Initially pioneered by NASA Goddard it was a direct result of a
SBIR Phase I R&D program funded by the USDA.
CSU/NREL derives high accuracy column ozone from UVMFR
A team of researchers working at the Natural Resource Ecology Lab
have developed and published new algorithms for deriving high accuracy
column ozone and aerosol optical depth from UVMFR
data. A paper describing the method and results has been submitted for
publication. Visit NREL for
more information on this important new scientific development.
|