Does an airfield ceilometer have an effective horizontal range ?
Bear with me. The airport I'm closest to (less than a mile) was reporting CAVOK about fifteen minutes ago, yet there were several cloud masses out west at the time - probably no more than ten miles away. These have since arrived overhead - few CB - and deposited some light showers. I assume the ceilometer doesn't reach out more than a few miles from its location. Please correct me if I've misunderstood how this device works.
Thankyou. |
To the best of my knowledge the ceilometer measures the base of the cloud, or in some cases several layers of cloud, directly overhead the instrument. To get horizontal coverage you would need at least two or sometimes a network of instruments. In my days of measuring cloud bases at night (a very long time ago) we used a searchlight to make an illuminated spot on the cloud and an alidade positioned a known distance away and then trigonometry.
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In the future, advanced 3D ceilometers will be able to cover the ceiling 10-15 km around the airfield.
Have a look at this one for example https://raymetrics.com/3d-ceilometer/ |
Which all costs money and in my experience, airport operators are notoriously loath to pay out on 'new' toys; they'll happily pay for a new fire engine but when it comes to ATC facilities we're bottom of the list.
I worked at an airport which just had a CBR but every time it got switched on, the manager would come in and pointedly turn it off as it 'wasted money'. |
Thanks all. I guess the ceilometer in question doesn't look too far.
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We did try to get a ceilometer for Lasham. Measures directly above (with some arc too), but obviously an unofficial met report would highlight any deteriorations expected from the Mark 1 Eyeball.
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The effective horizontal range is usually 25,000 ft., but...
Ceilometers measure cloud directly above the sensor. At 10,000 ft. above the sensor the LIDAR beam is only about 40 ft. wide. The algorithm uses past data, usually 15-30 minutes and determines the cloud height and amount. The most recent data is weighed more. If the cloud that passes directly over the sensor isn't representative, then the sky condition reported isn't accurate. Also, if the base of the cloud is above 5,000 ft it is usually not reported (depending on country). A network of sensors is more accurate, but apparently "not worth the cost" in most situations. https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sour...Uq-ff6TDpp0r9I https://www.google.com/url?sa=t&sour...0hqmnaBDneaSIs Most modern ceilometers measure to 25,000 ft., but data this high is rarely used in aviation reports. TCU and CB can be automated and derived from ceilometer, radar and satellite data, but these automated reports in my experience are unreliable. From the links above (ICAO references): When an observer is not available, ceilometer(s) provide the base information for clouds. If airports have only single ceilometer (with algorithm), the cloud reporting capability is rather restricted. In typical case the single ceilometer reports cloudiness for the line from centre of the aerodrome to 30-minutes downwind. The report totally lacks cloud data in upwind direction. The “area” covered with the cloudiness report is highly affected with wind speed. In 30 minutes clouds are moving downwind from the centre of the aerodrome: 2 km, with 1 m/s, 9 km with 5 m/s, 16 km with 9 m/s and 36 km with 20 m/s. The last distance is far out from the aerodrome vicinity area regardless of the aerodrome size. Multi-ceilometer algorithms provide an enhancement for sky condition information. Studies have shown that single and multi-ceilometer algorithms provide similar results even over 90 per cent of cases. One of the reasons is the use of a 30-minute period that smoothens the differences. Also a significant portion of steady conditions make this, at least partially, a statistical “fact”. This statistical point of view discards the safety and efficiency point of view where rapid change situations have a much greater effect on the airport operations than steady conditions. As METAR reports are not meant for operational decisions, a single ceilometer with sky condition algorithm seems to be a reasonable compromise. Automatic systems with a single ceilometer and 30-minute algorithms typically suffer with slow and late reporting of cloudiness in changing weather conditions. One possible benefit multiple ceilometers wide apart can provide is that the calculation period for the algorithm can be shortened. The same number of measurement points can be collected in less time reducing the wind speed effect to the measurement area. For example, three ceilometers and a 10-minute calculation period provide the same number of measurement data, but can better represent the aerodrome area and adapt faster to changing weather (cloudiness) conditions. |
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