1 / 21

VCPs for Staggered PRT

VCPs for Staggered PRT. Sebastián Torres and David Warde CIMMS/NSSL. Data Quality MOU – Technical Interchange Meeting Spring 2009. Outline. Designing VCPs for SPRT (recap) Importance Performance indicators PRT choice Recommended VCPs for SPRT Design criteria Trade-offs

azana
Download Presentation

VCPs for Staggered PRT

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. VCPs for Staggered PRT Sebastián Torres and David Warde CIMMS/NSSL Data Quality MOU – Technical Interchange Meeting Spring 2009

  2. Outline • Designing VCPs for SPRT (recap) • Importance • Performance indicators • PRT choice • Recommended VCPs for SPRT • Design criteria • Trade-offs • Performance analysis • Recommendation andFuture Work Staggered PRT ra = 184 km, va = 45.1 m/s

  3. VCPs for SPRT • VCP design for SPRT is crucial • SPRT algorithm performance is intimately tied to acquisition parameters • VCP design should follow the algorithm evolution • PRT ratio • Ground clutter filter • Overlaid echo recovery • More trade-offs than with other techniques • We want everything we’ve had and more! • SPRT will complement SZ-2 in VCPs that achieve a “complete solution” for the mitigation of R/V ambiguities

  4. VCP Performance Indicators • Acquisition time • Dwell times • Maximum unambiguous range • Surveillance (Z) • Doppler (V & W) • Maximum unambiguous velocity • Spectrum width saturation • Errors of estimates • Statistical errors • Dealiasing errors • Clutter suppression

  5. PRT Selection Trade-offs • Shorter PRTs • Larger Nyquist • Larger maximum spectrum width • More samples for the same dwell times • Lower errors of estimates • Lower rate of catastrophic errors • Better clutter suppression • Longer PRTs • Longer unambiguous range

  6. New VCP Design Criterion • We can trade shorter PRT for increased likelihood of overlaid echoes • Benefits are realized for elevations above 2.4 deg Solid: old Dashed: new

  7. Choosing the PRTs (I) • PRT ratio: 2/3 • Required for SACHI clutter filter • Choose the PRTs as short as possible • Maximum overlay condition • ra,2 = rmax • T1 = 4rmax / 3c • The proposed SPRT algorithm can handle overlaid echoes • ra,D = ra,S = ra,2

  8. Choosing the PRTs (II) • Minimum short PRT: 0.88 ms • Required to maintain 0.5 m/s velocity resolution • Maximum va for 0.5 m/s resolution is 63 m/s • Maximum va is obtained for minimum frequency • Using fmin= 2700 MHz and a PRT ratio of 2/3 • T1,min = c/(4 fmin va,max) • Maximum short PRT: 1.74 ms • Required to match rmax at the lowest SPRT elevation • Using lowest SPRT elevation of 1.8 deg and maximum rmax of 392 km • T1,max = 2rmax,max /c

  9. Choosing the PRTs (III) • SPRT short PRTs are selected from a set of 8 PRTs uniformly distributed between T1,min and T1,max

  10. Choosing the Dwell Times (I) • Dwell times must be chosen to… • Meet error requirements for reflectivity, velocity, and spectrum width • Meet clutter filtering requirements • Satisfy operational needs

  11. Choosing the Dwell Times (II) • Excessively long dwell times seem to be needed to meet “High Suppression” clutter filtering velocity requirements • Feasible, but operationally not acceptable • Recommend using dwell times to meet • System Specification standard error requirements and • “Medium Suppression” clutter filtering requirements • Most clutter contamination at SPRT elevations is through the antenna sidelobes • ~30 dB of clutter suppression should be adequate Batch?

  12. SPRT VCPs • Operational VCPs that have advanced R/V ambiguity mitigation schemes • VCP 121: SZ-2 & MPDA • R/V ambiguity mitigation on all tilts • VCP 211: VCP 11 with SZ-2 on split cuts • VCP 212: VCP 12 with SZ-2 on split cuts • VCP 221: VCP 21 with SZ-2 on split cuts

  13. Standard VCP 211

  14. Proposed VCP 211 • 1.3 min longer update time • Double va • Up to one half SD(Z ) • Use CDX at the upper tilts • Allow increased errors of estimates • Reduce clutter supp. at the upper tilts

  15. Standard VCP 212

  16. Proposed VCP 212 • 2.1 min longer update time • Double va • Up to one third SD(Z ) • SD(v ) ≤ 1 m/s

  17. Standard VCP 221

  18. Proposed VCP 221 • Same update time • Double va • Up to one half SD(Z )

  19. Proposed VCP Performance • Acquisition time • Same or longer dwell times • Some trade-offs can be made • Maximum unambiguous range and velocity • Great improvement w.r.t legacy VCPs • Spectrum width saturation • Acceptable • Errors of estimates • Statistical errors meet requirements • Much better reflectivity estimates! • Clutter suppression • Meets requirements for “Medium Suppression” filter

  20. Summary • Staggered PRT provides significant benefits … • Longer unambiguous range • Larger Nyquist velocity • More accurate reflectivity estimates • … that must be traded for … • Longer acquisition times • Operationally acceptable (trade-offs available!) • “Catastrophic” velocity dealiasing errors • Handled by ORPG’s VDA

  21. Future Work • Recommendation • Implement proposed VCPs • Collect several data cases • Process data using recommended SPRT algorithm including SACHI and modified ORPG velocity dealiasing algorithm • Assess data quality

More Related