Wind and Temperature Spectrometry of the Upper Atmosphere in Low-Earth Orbit
TBMG-10125
06/01/2011
- Content
Wind and Temperature Spectrometry (WATS) is a new approach to measure the full wind vector, temperature, and relative densities of major neutral species in the Earth’s thermosphere. The method uses an energy-angle spectrometer moving through the tenuous upper atmosphere to measure directly the angular and energy distributions of the air stream that enters the spectrometer. The angular distribution gives the direction of the total velocity of the air entering the spectrometer, and the energy distribution gives the magnitude of the total velocity. The wind velocity vector is uniquely determined since the measured total velocity depends on the wind vector and the orbiting velocity vector.
- Citation
- "Wind and Temperature Spectrometry of the Upper Atmosphere in Low-Earth Orbit," Mobility Engineering, June 1, 2011.