- J. S. Marshall Radar Observatory
The J.S. Marshall Radar Observatory (or MRO) is a
McGill University facility inSainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, Quebec housing severalweather radar s and other meteorological sensors, many of them running around the clock. It is one of the components of theMcGill Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences department where students in remote sensing perform their research. Furthermore, the main radar is part of theCanadian weather radar network , on a contract with theMeteorological Service of Canada , as well as a research device.Purpose
The main focus of the MRO is teaching and research. The group upgrades and designs radars, develops new ways to process the radar signals and use the resulting data, and performs research on the physics of weather events and their prediction. Results of the research are published in scientific journals and transferred for use by the weather office.
History
In 1862, a first Weather Observatory was built by McGill University [cite web|year=1968 | title=Three McGill Weather Observatories| work= J.S. Marshall
McGill University | url=http://www.radar.mcgill.ca/history.html | accessdate=2006-06-14] . The instruments were donated by Dr. Charles Smallwood (MD), who had personally taken weather data with them since 1840. This station became one of the first in the weather station network set up after the telegraph became ubiquitous.In 1943, Project Stormy Weather was assigned to J.S. Marshall in Ottawa by National Defense. The aim was to find a use for noise in radar echoes that had proved to be from weather. Marshall and his doctoral student Walter Palmer became later well known for their work on the drop size distribution in mid-latitude rain that led to the rain rate relation to radar
reflectivity (Z-R relation). Just after theSecond World War , Marshall and R.H. Douglas formed the "Stormy Weather Group" [cite web|year=2000 | title=Stormy Weather Group| work=McGill University | url=http://www.radar.mcgill.ca/history.html | accessdate=2006-06-14] at McGill University and continued their work.Different radars were used by the Group to research the characteristics of precipitation at
Dawson College , continuing the tradition of meteorology at McGill. It was decided to build a new facility in 1968 in Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue, on the western tip ofMontreal Island and to transfer all the group activity there. This new observatory was later renamed the J.S. Marshall Radar Observatory in honor of its founder.Main instrument
year=2002|accessdate=2006-06-14] , used by the local weather office to monitor weather in real time for a variety of applications, from severe weather detection to sewer flow forecasting.
Characteristics [Cite web
url=http://www.radar.mcgill.ca/s_band.html
title=McGill S-band radar
author=Frédéric Fabry
publisher=McGill University
month=August | year=2000
accessdate=2008-03-08] :* Its
ICAO calling identifier is CWMN.
* Its coordinates are coord|45|25|26.76|N|73|56|14.64|W, at 50 m above sea level.
* It has a large 9meter (30 foot) diameter antenna transmitting impulses from aklystron .
* Its tower is 25 m high.
* It scans the atmosphere on 24 angles from 0.5 to 34.4 degrees above the horizon in 5 minutes.
* It was originally recording only reflectivities, giving position and intensity of precipitation. In1992 , it was upgraded to treat Doppler data and thus estimate the motion of the drops. It was upgraded again in1999 with a dualpolarization capability which allows direct identification of the type of precipitation (rain, snow, hail, etc...).As it is a research as well as an operational radar, the large amount of data accumulated is studied for further development in radar hardware and software capabilities. The data are correlated with the other instruments in related research.
Other instruments
Many other devices are operated by the MRO at the site or in other locations. These varies according to the research interests pursued. Some of them are or have been [Cite web
url=http://www.radar.mcgill.ca/home.html
title=Home of the J.S. Mashall Observatory
author=Frédéric Fabry
publisher=McGill University
month=August | year=2000
accessdate=2008-03-08] :*
UHF Wind profiler
* Bistatic radars
* X-band (3 centimeter wavelength) vertical pointing radar
*Ceilometer References
External links
* [http://www.radar.mcgill.ca/ J.S. Marshall Radar Observatory homepage]
* [http://weather.ec.gc.ca/radar/index_e.html?id=WMN Real time data from CWMN by Environment Canada]
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