DocumentCode :
126408
Title :
Program of the Antarctic Syowa MST/IS radar
Author :
Sato, Kiminori ; Tsutsumi, M. ; Sato, Takao ; Nakamura, T. ; Saito, Akihiro ; Tomikawa, Yoshihiro ; Nishimura, Kosuke ; Kohma, Masashi ; Yamagishi, Hisao ; Yamanouchi, Takashi
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Earth & Planetary Sci., Univ. of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan
fYear :
2014
fDate :
16-23 Aug. 2014
Firstpage :
1
Lastpage :
1
Abstract :
The PANSY radar is the first Mesosphere-Stratosphere-Troposphere/Incoherent Scatter (MST/IS) radar in the Antarctic. It is a VHF monostatic pulse Doppler radar operating at 47 MHz, consisting of an active phased array of 1,045 Yagi antennas and an equivalent number of transmit-receiver modules with a total peak output power of 500 kW. The first stage of the radar was installed at Syowa Station (69°00´S, 39°35´E) in early 2011, and is continuously operating with 228 antennas and modules since April 2012. The full radar system operation will start in 2015. This paper reports the project´s scientific objectives, technical descriptions, and the preliminary results of observations made to date. The radar is designed to clarify the role of atmospheric gravity waves at high latitudes in the momentum budget of the global circulation in the troposphere, stratosphere and mesosphere, and to explore the dynamical aspects of unique polar phenomena such as polar mesospheric/stratospheric clouds. The katabatic winds as a branch of Antarctic tropospheric circulation and as an important source of gravity waves are also of special interest. Moreover, strong and sporadic energy inputs from the magnetosphere by energetic particles and field-aligned currents can be quantitatively assessed by the broad height coverage of the radar which extends from the lower troposphere to the upper ionosphere. From engineering points of view, the radar had to overcome restrictions related to the severe environments of Antarctic research, such as very strong winds, limited power availability, short construction periods, and limited manpower availability. We resolved these problems through the adoption of specially designed class-E amplifiers, lightweight and tough antenna elements, and versatile antenna arrangements. We will show highlights of several interesting results from the radar observations regarding severe snow storms, gravity waves, multiple tropopauses, and polar mesospher- summer/winter echoes.
Keywords :
Yagi antenna arrays; active antenna arrays; radar antennas; radar receivers; radar transmitters; Antarctic Syowa MST-IS radar; Antarctic tropospheric circulation; PANSY radar; Syowa Station; VHF monostatic pulse Doppler radar; Yagi antennas; active phased array; antenna elements; atmospheric gravity waves; class-E amplifiers; energetic particles; field-aligned currents; gravity waves; magnetosphere; mesosphere-stratosphere-troposphere-incoherent scatter radar; momentum budget; polar mesosphere summer-winter echoes; polar mesospheric-stratospheric clouds; power availability; radar system operation; transmit-receiver modules; tropopauses; versatile antenna; Antarctica; Doppler radar; Educational institutions; Electronic mail; Radar antennas; Radar scattering;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
General Assembly and Scientific Symposium (URSI GASS), 2014 XXXIth URSI
Conference_Location :
Beijing
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/URSIGASS.2014.6929774
Filename :
6929774
Link To Document :
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