Title: Summary of Global Tropospheric Wind Sounder GTWS Technology Roadmap
1Summary of Global Tropospheric Wind Sounder
(GTWS) Technology Roadmap
- Ken Miller, Mitretek Systems
- June 23, 2003
2Agenda
- Purpose
- Vital National Need
- Multi-year Interagency Program Recommendation
- Status
- Reference Designs
- DWL Alternatives
- Roadmap
- Summary and Recommendations
- Acknowledgments
3Purpose
- GTWS Acquire global wind profiles
- Roadmap Focus GTWS activities
- Draft roadmap submitted for NASA and NOAA
consideration - Based on multi-agency input
- High level
- Important unknown factors
- Resource needs will vary widely depending on
approach and rate of technology progress
4Vital National Need
- Global winds are the number 1 unmet observational
requirement for global weather forecasts (NPOESS
IPO) - NASA Earth Science Directorate plans include
global tropospheric wind observation and
assimilation - Wind data will support missions of NOAA, NASA,
DOD, FAA, FEMA, Department of Homeland Security - Benefits to government, industry, and citizens
include - Weather forecasting
- Atmospheric and climate studies
- Transportation
- Air quality forecasting
- Shipping
- Agriculture
- Construction
5Multi-year InteragencyProgram Recommendation
- Participating agencies
- Prepare a long term plan
- Define appropriate agency roles
- Share funding, staff, and other resource
commitments - Share user benefits
6Status
- NOAA/NASA partnership since 2000
- Guided by GTWS Executive Steering Committee
(GESC) - Investigate data acquisition
- GESC action item to prepare this roadmap
- Data requirements
- OSSEs
- Requirements validation
- Benefit quantification
- Favorable preliminary benefit-to-cost ratios
- Reference instruments and missions
- Assess technology readiness
- Support evaluation of alternatives
- Preliminary cost estimates
- NASA Laser Risk Reduction Program (LRRP)
7Status (continued)
- Instrument activities
- NASA, NOAA, IPO and others demonstrating ground
and airborne DWLs - IPO funding airborne work on calibration/validatio
n - Related international missions
- Japanese National Space Development Agency
(NASDA) - European Space Agency (ESA)
8Status - Measurement Concept
7.7 km/s
- Vertical resolution range gates
- 45 o nadir angle
- Scan through 8 azimuth angles
- Fore and aft perspectives in TSV
- Move scan position 1 sec
- No. shots averaged 5 sec prf
- 4 ground tracks
Aft perspective
45
585 km
400 km
45
Horizontal TSV
414 km
7.2 km/s
290 km
290 km
9Status - Instrument Concepts
Belt Drive
Radiator
Telescope with Sunshade
Rotating Deck
Component Boxes
Direct
Radiator
Component Housing
Coherent
Note Large solar arrays not shown
10Status - DWL Alternatives
- Each alternative has advantages
- Direct detection
- Coherent
- Hybrid
- Hybrid combines complementary aspects of coherent
and direct detection - Possibly the most rapid and economical approach
- May complicate mission and spacecraft issues
- IPO is sponsoring a hybrid DWL feasibility study
11Status -Reference Designs
- Need space-qualified DWL capable of meeting data
requirements - Coherent and direct detection reference designs
completed - Large and heavy spacecraft
- Massive optical components
- Very high electrical power consumption
- Hybrid
- Promising point design supported by IPO
- Reference design not completed
12Roadmap - Near Term Issues
- Technology development needed
- Lasers
- Detectors
- Low-mass telescopes
- Scanners
- Momentum compensation
- Benefits and sensitivity to data requirements
- Hybrid reference design
- DWL alternatives - trade studies
- Impacts on data products from atmospheric
properties, DWL alternatives, and spacecraft
mechanics - Calibration and validation
13Roadmap
- Time scale depends on
- Funding and resource decisions
- Technology advances
- Longest lead time estimates
- Flight qualified lasers 4 years
- Electro-optic scanners (alternative to rotating
telescope scanners) up to 6 years - Laboratory, ground, air, and space demonstrations
will reduce risk and cost
14Roadmap Major Tasks and Phasing
No time scale assigned pending planning decisions
15Roadmap Task Descriptions
- 1. GESC Oversight- coordinate interagency
support and management - 2. Data Requirements and Data Utility
Preparedness - Benefits, sensitivity to data requirements
- Data assimilation
- Revised data requirements, if justified
- 3. Achieve Technology Readiness
- Lasers
- Detectors
- Low-mass telescopes
- Scanners
- Momentum compensation
16Roadmap Task Descriptions (continued)
- 4. Architecture- system engineering and
architecture for optimal design and acquisition,
e.g. - Trades between data requirements and technology
- Hybrid reference design
- Trades between DWL alternatives
- Atmosphere and lidar models
- Impacts on data products from atmospheric
properties, DWL alternatives, and spacecraft
mechanics - Calibration and validation
- 5. Ground Demonstration- prototype DWLs
17Roadmap Task Descriptions (concluded)
- 6. Air Demonstration
- Selected DWL approach
- Variety of atmospheric conditions
- 7. Space Demonstration
- Prove ability to meet data requirements from
orbit - Shuttle, International Space Station, DOD Space
Test Program mission, or other platform - 8. Operational Mission
- Acquire, launch, and operate end-to-end system
- Produce and distribute data products
- Orbit a second instrument, as required, to meet
temporal and spatial resolution requirements
18Lower Level Roadmaps
19Roadmap - Preliminary Resource Estimates
- Cost estimates for internal government use
- Depend on a wide range of contingencies
- Inference from experience is not very accurate
20Roadmap First Cut Fraction of Relative Cost by
Task
Fraction of total cost
21Summary and Recommendations
- Promising preliminary benefit to cost ratio
- Requires technology advances
- Architecture studies
- To drive future work
- Potential savings on development, space
demonstration, and mission - Interagency team
- Near term activities
22Acknowledgments
Farzin Amzajerdian (NASA/LaRC) Robert Atlas
(NASA/GSFC) Wayman Baker (NOAA/NWS) James Barnes
(NASA/LaRC) David Emmitt (Simpson Weather
Associates) Bruce Gentry (NASA/GSFC) Ingrid Guch
(NOAA/NESDIS) Michael Hardesty (NOAA/OAR) Michael
Kavaya (NASA/LaRC) Stephen Mango
(NPOESS/IPO) Kenneth Miller (Mitretek
Systems) Steven Neeck (NASA/HQ) John Pereira
(NOAA/NESDIS) Frank Peri (NASA/LaRC) Upendra
Singh (NASA/LaRC) Gary Spiers (NASA/JPL) James G.
Yoe (NOAA/NESDIS)