CASPER: Coupled Air–Sea Processes and Electromagnetic Ducting Research

The Coupled Air–Sea Processes and Electromagnetic Ducting Research (CASPER) project aims to better quantify atmospheric effects on the propagation of radar and communication signals in the marine environment. Such effects are associated with vertical gradients of temperature and water vapor in the marine atmospheric surface layer (MASL) and in the capping inversion of the marine atmospheric boundary layer (MABL), as well as the horizontal variations of these vertical gradients. CASPER field measurements emphasized simultaneous characterization of electromagnetic (EM) wave propagation, the propagation environment, and the physical processes that gave rise to the measured refractivity conditions. CASPER modeling efforts utilized state-of-the-art large-eddy simulations (LESs) with a dynamically coupled MASL and phase-resolved ocean surface waves. CASPER-East was the first of two planned field campaigns, conducted in October and November 2015 offshore of Duck, North Carolina. This article highlights the scientific motivations and objectives of CASPER and provides an overview of the CASPER-East field campaign. The CASPER-East sampling strategy enabled us to obtain EM wave propagation loss as well as concurrent environmental refractive conditions along the propagation path. This article highlights the initial results from this sampling strategy showing the range-dependent propagation loss, the atmospheric and upper-oceanic variability along the propagation range, and the MASL thermodynamic profiles measured during CASPER-East.

[1]  R. Shearman,et al.  Long-Term Sea Surface Temperature Variability along the U.S. East Coast , 2010 .

[2]  E. Hendricks,et al.  Real-Time Tropical Cyclone Prediction Using COAMPS-TC , 2011 .

[3]  Steven C. Reising,et al.  The RED Experiment: An Assessment of Boundary Layer Effects in a Trade Winds Regime on Microwave and Infrared Propagation over the Sea , 2004 .

[4]  E. F. Bradley,et al.  Cool‐skin and warm‐layer effects on sea surface temperature , 1996 .

[5]  Lian Shen,et al.  Dynamic modelling of sea-surface roughness for large-eddy simulation of wind over ocean wavefield , 2013, Journal of Fluid Mechanics.

[6]  Travis A. Smith,et al.  Tropical Cyclone Prediction Using COAMPS-TC , 2014 .

[7]  E. F. Bradley,et al.  Bulk Parameterization of Air–Sea Fluxes: Updates and Verification for the COARE Algorithm , 2003 .

[8]  David P. Rogers,et al.  Observations of Strong Surface Radar Ducts over the Persian Gulf , 1999 .

[9]  R. A. Silverman,et al.  Wave Propagation in a Turbulent Medium , 1961 .

[10]  Luc Musson-Genon,et al.  A simple method to determine evaporation duct height in the sea surface boundary layer , 1992 .

[11]  G. D. Dockery Modeling electromagnetic wave propagation in the troposphere using the parabolic equation , 1988 .

[12]  Sasa Gabersek,et al.  Effect of Two-Way Air–Sea Coupling in High and Low Wind Speed Regimes , 2010 .

[13]  E. F. Bradley,et al.  Flux-Profile Relationships in the Atmospheric Surface Layer , 1971 .

[14]  James C. McWilliams,et al.  Large-Eddy Simulations and Observations of Atmospheric Marine Boundary Layers above Nonequilibrium Surface Waves , 2008 .

[15]  Julian C. R. Hunt,et al.  Heat/mass transfer in the slightly unstable atmospheric surface layer , 2007 .

[16]  A. E. Barrios,et al.  Parabolic equation modeling in horizontally inhomogeneous environments , 1992 .

[17]  Lian Shen,et al.  Simulation-based study of wind loads on semi-submersed object in ocean wave field , 2016 .

[18]  Larry Mahrt,et al.  Heat fluxes over weak SST heterogeneity , 2010 .

[19]  Peter Cornillon,et al.  Air–sea interaction over ocean fronts and eddies , 2008 .

[20]  Qing Wang,et al.  Aircraft Observations of Sea-Surface Turbulent Fluxes Near the California Coast , 2011 .

[21]  Robert E. Marshall,et al.  Mesoscale Modeling of Boundary Layer Refractivity and Atmospheric Ducting , 2010 .

[22]  J. M. Bishop,et al.  An Example of Gulf Stream Eddy-Induced Water Exchange in the Mid-Atlantic Bight , 1977 .

[23]  R. A. Paulus,et al.  Practical application of an evaporation duct model , 1985 .

[24]  R. Fett,et al.  Air-Sea Interaction Effects in the Lower Troposphere Across the North Wall of the Gulf Stream , 1981 .

[25]  George S. Young,et al.  A New Model of the Oceanic Evaporation Duct , 1997 .

[26]  C. Mastenbroek,et al.  Impact of waves on air-sea exchange of sensible heat and momentum , 1996 .

[27]  W. McGillis,et al.  Scalar flux profile relationships over the open ocean , 2004 .

[28]  Irina Sirkova,et al.  Brief review on PE method application to propagation channel modeling in sea environment , 2012 .

[29]  D. Alappattu,et al.  Anomalous propagation conditions over eastern Pacific Ocean derived from MAGIC data , 2016 .

[30]  H. Fernando,et al.  Vertical mixing and elements of mesoscale dynamics over North Carolina shelf and contiguous Gulf Stream waters , 2017, Ocean Dynamics.

[31]  B. W. Atkinson,et al.  Coastal effects on radar propagation in atmospheric ducting conditions , 2006 .

[32]  E. Carmack,et al.  A climatology of the shelfbreak front in the Middle Atlantic Bight (Paper 98JC01438) , 1998 .

[33]  J. D. Turton,et al.  An introduction to radio ducting , 1988 .

[34]  Hedley J. Hansen,et al.  The Tropical Air–Sea Propagation Study (TAPS) , 2017 .

[35]  W. Thompson,et al.  An Investigation of Sea Surface Temperature Influence on Microwave Refractivity: The Wallops-2000 Experiment , 2011 .

[36]  Thomas N. Lee,et al.  Circulation On the Continental Shelf of the Southeastern United States. Part I: Subtidal Response to Wind and Gulf Stream Forcing During Winter , 1984 .

[37]  A. Karimian,et al.  Refractivity estimation from sea clutter: An invited review , 2011 .

[38]  A. Christman,et al.  Warm layer and cool skin corrections for bulk water temperature measurements for air-sea interaction Studies , 2017 .

[39]  Low-Level Wind Maxima and Structure of the Stably Stratified Boundary Layer in the Coastal Zone , 2014 .

[40]  Louis J. Battan,et al.  Radar Observation of the Atmosphere , 1973 .

[41]  Anna Rutgersson,et al.  Use of conventional stability parameters during swell , 2001 .

[42]  A. Barrios A terrain parabolic equation model for propagation in the troposphere , 1994 .