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Synthetic Aperture Radar Wind Atlas US East Coast

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The objective of this study is to create and validate a satellite-based offshore wind atlas for the US East Coast and compare it to outputs from numerical weather prediction models. We present the first synthetic aperture radar (SAR) offshore wind atlas of the US East Coast from Georgia to the Canadian border. Images from RADARSAT-1, Envisat, and Sentinel-1A/B are processed to wind maps using the geophysical model function (GMF) CMOD5.N. Extensive comparisons with 6008 collocated buoy observations of the wind speed reveal that biases of the individual systems range from -0.8 to 0.6ms^-1. Unbiased wind retrievals are crucial for producing an accurate wind atlas, and intercalibration of the SAR observations is therefore applied. Wind retrievals from the intercalibrated SAR observations show biases in the range of to -0.2 to 0.0ms^-1, while at the same time improving the root-mean-squared error from 1.67 to 1.46ms^-1. The intercalibrated SAR observations are, for the first time, aggregated to create a wind atlas at the height 10ma.s.l. (above sea level). The SAR wind atlas is used as a reference to study wind resources derived from the Wind Integration National Dataset Toolkit (WTK), which is based on 7 years of modelling output from the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. Comparisons focus on the spatial variation in wind resources and show that model outputs lead to lower coastal wind speed gradients than those derived from SAR. Areas designated for offshore wind development by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management are investigated in more detail; the wind resources in terms of the mean wind speed show spatial variations within each designated area between 0.3 and 0.5ms^-1 for SAR and less than 0.2ms^-1 for the WTK. Our findings indicate that wind speed gradients and variations might be underestimated in mesoscale model outputs along the US East Coast.

Citation Formats

National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL). (2020). Synthetic Aperture Radar Wind Atlas US East Coast [data set]. Retrieved from https://data.openei.org/submissions/5984.
Export Citation to RIS
Ahsbahs, Tobias, MacLaurin, Galen, Draxl, Caroline, Jackson, Christopher, Monaldo, Frank, and Badger, Merete. Synthetic Aperture Radar Wind Atlas US East Coast. United States: N.p., 17 Sep, 2020. Web. https://data.openei.org/submissions/5984.
Ahsbahs, Tobias, MacLaurin, Galen, Draxl, Caroline, Jackson, Christopher, Monaldo, Frank, & Badger, Merete. Synthetic Aperture Radar Wind Atlas US East Coast. United States. https://data.openei.org/submissions/5984
Ahsbahs, Tobias, MacLaurin, Galen, Draxl, Caroline, Jackson, Christopher, Monaldo, Frank, and Badger, Merete. 2020. "Synthetic Aperture Radar Wind Atlas US East Coast". United States. https://data.openei.org/submissions/5984.
@div{oedi_5984, title = {Synthetic Aperture Radar Wind Atlas US East Coast}, author = {Ahsbahs, Tobias, MacLaurin, Galen, Draxl, Caroline, Jackson, Christopher, Monaldo, Frank, and Badger, Merete.}, abstractNote = {The objective of this study is to create and validate a satellite-based offshore wind atlas for the US East Coast and compare it to outputs from numerical weather prediction models. We present the first synthetic aperture radar (SAR) offshore wind atlas of the US East Coast from Georgia to the Canadian border. Images from RADARSAT-1, Envisat, and Sentinel-1A/B are processed to wind maps using the geophysical model function (GMF) CMOD5.N. Extensive comparisons with 6008 collocated buoy observations of the wind speed reveal that biases of the individual systems range from -0.8 to 0.6ms^-1. Unbiased wind retrievals are crucial for producing an accurate wind atlas, and intercalibration of the SAR observations is therefore applied. Wind retrievals from the intercalibrated SAR observations show biases in the range of to -0.2 to 0.0ms^-1, while at the same time improving the root-mean-squared error from 1.67 to 1.46ms^-1. The intercalibrated SAR observations are, for the first time, aggregated to create a wind atlas at the height 10ma.s.l. (above sea level). The SAR wind atlas is used as a reference to study wind resources derived from the Wind Integration National Dataset Toolkit (WTK), which is based on 7 years of modelling output from the Weather Research and Forecasting (WRF) model. Comparisons focus on the spatial variation in wind resources and show that model outputs lead to lower coastal wind speed gradients than those derived from SAR. Areas designated for offshore wind development by the Bureau of Ocean Energy Management are investigated in more detail; the wind resources in terms of the mean wind speed show spatial variations within each designated area between 0.3 and 0.5ms^-1 for SAR and less than 0.2ms^-1 for the WTK. Our findings indicate that wind speed gradients and variations might be underestimated in mesoscale model outputs along the US East Coast. }, doi = {}, url = {https://data.openei.org/submissions/5984}, journal = {}, number = , volume = , place = {United States}, year = {2020}, month = {09}}

Details

Data from Sep 17, 2020

Last updated Jan 4, 2024

Submitted Dec 29, 2023

Organization

National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL)

Contact

Caroline Draxl

Authors

Tobias Ahsbahs

Technical University of Denmark

Galen MacLaurin

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Caroline Draxl

National Renewable Energy Laboratory

Christopher Jackson

Global Ocean Associates

Frank Monaldo

John Hopkins University

Merete Badger

Techical University of Denmark

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