In 2012, ÍøÆØÃÅ was awarded a $3 million grant through the Louisiana Governor's Office of Homeland Security and Emergency Preparedness (GOSHEP) to acquire a Doppler weather radar (press release). ÌýIn 2015, Enterprise Electronics Corporation (EEC) was awarded the winning bid to manufacture and erect ÍøÆØÃÅ's weather radar.
The ÍøÆØÃÅ weather radar is a scanning polarimetric Doppler radar operating at S-band with a beam width of 0.95°. ÌýIn addition to being an education and research tool for the Department of Atmospheric Science, the radar will fill a low-level NEXRAD coverage gap over northeast Louisiana and southeast Arkansas (see before and after). ÌýThe radar data will be available to the National Weather Service to help serve their mission of protecting life and property in this region, which is important considering the ArkLaMiss is prone to severe weather (see climatology of tornado formation within 100-km of the ÍøÆØÃÅ radar location).
ÍøÆØÃÅ is the only primarily undergraduate institution in the United States with a S-band polarimetric Doppler weather radar. ÌýOur students receive hands-on instruction at the undergraduate level on radar operation, in addition to advanced radar analysis and interpretation techniques. ÌýThis uniquely positions our graduates for jobs that require radar operation and/or analysis skill.
Officials from GOSHEP and ÍøÆØÃÅ, including faculty and students, officially broke ground on the weather radar on May 6, 2015 (press release). ÌýClick here for more photos from the groundbreaking.
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The ÍøÆØÃÅ polarimetric S-band Doppler weather radar is operational with base products available onÌýour weather data site. ÌýThe radar is in use by the region's emergency managers and the National Weather Service offices in Shreveport, LA and Jackson, MS.
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The radar has been featured in the following publications and conference presentations:
Murphy, T.A., C. Entremont, B. Hughes, D. Lamb, and M. Mayeaux, 2017: Early Operational Successes of the University of Louisiana at Monroe's S-band Polarimetric Doppler Radar.Ìý38th Conference on Radar Meteorology, Chicago, IL, Amer. Meteor. Soc. [PDF]
Murphy, T.A., A.T.C. Hanks, and E.A. Pani, 2015: The University of Louisiana at Monroe's Polarimetric Doppler Radar - Teaching, Research, and Operations.Ìý37th Conference on Radar Meteorology, Norman, OK, Amer. Meteor. Soc. [PDF]
For further information on the radar, including data requests or to schedule a tour of the radar site, please contact:
Dr. Todd Murphy
murphy@ulm.edu
or
Dr. Anne Case Hanks
casehanks@ulm.edu
Below are selected specifications comparing the ÍøÆØÃÅ radar with the national radar network. ÌýThe ÍøÆØÃÅ radar is considered "88D equivalent."
Ìý | ÍøÆØÃÅ Radar | WSR-88D |
Transmitter Type | Magnetron | Klystron |
Frequency (Wavelength) |
2.950 GHz (10.162 cm @ 2.950 GHz) |
2.7-3.0 GHz (10.71 cm) |
Transmit Power | 850 kW (peak power) |
750 kW (peak power) |
Pulse Width | 0.5, 0.8, 1.0, & 2.0Ìýμ²õ | 1.57 & 4.57Ìýμ²õ |
Antenna Diameter | 8.5 m (28 ft) | 8.5 m (28 ft) |
Beamwidth | 0.95° | 1.0° |
Gate Spacing | ≤ 250 m | 250 m |