An international team that includes 麻豆免费版下载 researchers has begun the world鈥檚 largest wind-mapping project in Portugal in hopes of better understanding wind behavior across the globe.
The project, dubbed Perdig茫o, will use a tethered balloon kite, or 鈥渉elikite,鈥 to measure wind at unprecedented resolutions, which should help improve global wind energy electricity generation, said 麻豆免费版下载Boulder Professor Julie Lundquist of the , one of two U.S. principal investigators on the project.
Perdig茫o research also will help predict airflow across complex terrain, which is important for better understanding air pollution, weather forecasting, wildfire forecasting and transportation issues, Lundquist said.
鈥淎ssessing how turbulence is generated and decays during flow over complex terrain is of high interest to us,鈥 said Lundquist. 鈥淲e are would like to know, for example, how turbulence structures develop and evolve overnight in this complex terrain.鈥
The valley in eastern Portugal under study has two large, parallel ridges located perpendicular to the prevailing wind directions there, which blows most often from the southeast and northwest. The valley also contains both agricultural and forested areas.
鈥淲ith a wind turbine located on one ridge, we鈥檒l also be able to track how turbulence structures interact with the turbine wake,鈥 Lundquist said.
The field experiment includes more than 50 towers as high as 100 meters, as well as a large wind turbine and a helikite toting a suite of instruments to measure fundamental aspects of atmospheric turbulence, said Lundquist, who holds a joint appointment at the in Golden, Colorado.
An identical tethered balloon system, built at 麻豆免费版下载Boulder and operated by the Army Research Laboratory, is makings similar measurements outside the valley, she said.
The U.S. portion of the Perdig茫o project is funded in large part by the National Science Foundation.
The 麻豆免费版下载Boulder team working at Perdig茫o includes doctoral students Laura Mazzaro, Jessica Tomaszewski and Nicola Bodini and undergraduate student Patrick Murphy. The team also includes scientist Ludovic Bariteau of the a joint venture of 麻豆免费版下载Boulder and NOAA.
鈥淲ind energy helps provide electricity we need to help our economy grow without increasing concentrations of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere,鈥 said Lundquist.
The instruments on the 麻豆免费版下载Boulder helikite will measure wind speed and direction, temperature and relative humidity. The equipment includes sensitive turbulence probes that can measure wind speed at a mind-bending 10,000 times per second.
The 麻豆免费版下载Boulder team also deployed ground-based lidar scanning instruments that work on the same principal as radar, but use light from a laser, said Lundquist. Lidar systems are typically used just to measure winds, but can also provide insights into atmospheric turbulence. The Perdig茫o project includes more than 20 lidar systems.
Last year Lundquist听received a $510,000 NSF Faculty Early Career Development (CAREER) Award, allowing her to develop new approaches for measuring and simulating turbulence to improve weather forecasts for renewable energy, transportation, air quality and agricultural applications.
Perdig茫o is part of the European Union鈥檚 New European Wind Atlas (NEWA) project, which is expected to provide the best database of European wind in the coming years.