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Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL Short Tower, Grass Valley - Raw Data
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-m tower. Specifically, the stations are comprised of the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM6 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer * RavenXT Cellular Modem The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC and denote the end of the 1-minute average. **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: .
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Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL Short Tower, Grass Valley - Reviewed Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-meter tower. Specifically, the stations comprise the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM10 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base-station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and denote the end of the 1-minute average. Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: . Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Constraints** None
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL Short Tower, Umatilla - Raw Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-m tower. Specifically, the stations are comprised of the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM6 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer * RavenXT Cellular Modem The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC and denote the end of the 1-minute average. **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: .
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL Short Tower, Umatilla - Reviewed Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-meter tower. Specifically, the stations comprise the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM10 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base-station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and denote the end of the 1-minute average. Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: . Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Constraints** None
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL Short Tower, Hood River - Reviewed Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-meter tower. Specifically, the stations comprise the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM10 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base-station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and denote the end of the 1-minute average. Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: . Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Constraints** None
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL Short Tower, Rufus - Raw Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-m tower. Specifically, the stations are comprised of the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM6 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer * RavenXT Cellular Modem The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC and denote the end of the 1-minute average. **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: .
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL 3m Tower, Physics site-8 - Raw Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-m tower. Specifically, the stations are comprised of the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM6 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer * RavenXT Cellular Modem The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC and denote the end of the 1-minute average. **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: .
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL 3m Tower, Physics site-7 - Raw Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-m tower. Specifically, the stations are comprised of the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM6 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer * RavenXT Cellular Modem The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC and denote the end of the 1-minute average. **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: .
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL 3m Tower, Physics site-8 - Reviewed Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-meter tower. Specifically, the stations comprise the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM10 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base-station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and denote the end of the 1-minute average. Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: . Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Constraints** Downwelling shortwave solar radiation sensor not installed because of close proximity to site met.z07.
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL 3m Tower, Physics site-7 - Reviewed Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** In support of the Wind Forecasting Improvement Project, Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) deployed surface meteorological stations in Oregon. **Data Details** A PNNL computer is used as the base station to download the meteorological data acquired by the data logger at each site via a cellular modem. The data collected will be made available to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) each hour and used to support the short-term forecasting project by providing an independent evaluation of the added value of new data to meteorological forecasts. Each meteorological station consists of a solar-powered data acquisition system and wind speed, wind direction, temperature, humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation sensors on a 3-meter tower. Specifically, the stations comprise the following instruments and equipment: * Campbell Scientific CM10 Tripod * Campbell Scientific CR10X Measurement and Control System * R.M. Young 05106 Wind Monitor * Vaisala HMP45C Temperature and Humidity Probe * Vaisala PTB101B Barometric Pressure Sensor * Li-Cor LI200X Pyranometer The data logger is used to sample, at 1-second intervals, the horizontal wind speed and direction at 3 meters above ground level (AGL); the air temperature, relative humidity, barometric pressure, and solar radiation at 2 meters AGL; and the logger temperature and power supply. The logger outputs the 1-minute averages of these measurements to final storage and power on the cellular modem, so the data can be retrieved and downloaded to a base-station computer. The data are archived as 1-hour comma-delimited ASCII files (see "Table 2. Format of the WFIP2 Comma-delimited ASCII Data Files" in **wfip2-met-data.pdf**). All dates and times in the file names and data records are in UTC (Coordinated Universal Time) and denote the end of the 1-minute average. Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Data Quality** Data for each primary measurement at every site are automatically plotted daily and reviewed about every three days. Instrument outages or events are reported with the Instrument and Model Data Problem Log at: . Data known to be of bad quality have been replaced with "-9999." **Constraints** None
Surface Meteorological Station - PNNL 10m Sonic, Physics site-5 - Derived Data
공공데이터포털
**Overview** This set provides estimation of the turbulent fluxes obtained with EddyPro v6.2.0 software (15-min averaging). **Data Details** Each meteorological station had one sonic anemometer (Gill R3-50, omnidirectional) mounted on top of a 10-m tower. Sensor verticality (within a degree) was verified by the analog inclinometer mounted on the base plate alongside the sonic anemometer. NOTE: the sonic anemometer has been oriented to the magnetic North. The serial data stream was transmitted via radio link (9XTend RF modem by MaxStream) to the data acquisition computer housed in a temperature-controlled enclosure at the base of the 80-m tower. The original data were stored in flat ASCII files in 30-min pieces (".00." level). The raw data were preprocessed to conform with EddyPro software. All evidently erroneous and/or broken lines were marked as bad. All erroneous or missed data were replaced with "baddata" place holder (99.99), the housekeeping data were stripped off, and the data were split into 5-min portions with no internal time stamp. The preprocessed data are available from the archive as “.a0” level data. The current dataset is the result of processing the preprocessed data (“.a0”) with EddyPro v6.2.0 for 15-minute intervals. The dataset contains results and metadata that should fully cover all software settings and options used in data processing. **Data Quality** Beyond the Quality Control (QC) procedures implemented in EddyPro, nothing additional is included.