Optical Measurement of Airborne Particles on Unmanned Aircraft
Abstract
Aerosols and clouds are persistent causes of uncertainty in climate and weather models,
which is due to their heterogeneous suspension and occurrence within the atmosphere, and
complex interactions which are chaotic and exist on small scales. Unmanned aerial vehicles
(UAVs) have grown in popularity, and are becoming more commonly used for general atmospheric
measurement, particularly measurement of aerosols and clouds. This thesis presents
and evaluates a synergy between two UAVs, a multi-rotor: the UH-AeroSAM octocopter and
a fixed-wing: the FMI-Talon, and an optical particle instrument: the Universal Cloud and
Aerosol Sounding System. Computational fluid dynamics with Lagrangian particle tracking
(CFD-LPT) was used as a tool for the characterisation of the velocity fields and particle
trajectories around both UAVs. In both instances CFD-LPT was used to develop an operational
envelope, with particular attention to angle of attack constraints and size distribution
perturbation, for the UAV – instrument synergy. UCASS was the first open path instrument
to be used on a UAV, and a good case has been made for its continued use, particularly
on fixed-wing UAVs, which exhibit less complex aerodynamics and superior stability in the
induced sampling airflow through the instrument.
Publication date
2023-09-30Published version
https://doi.org/10.18745/th.27277https://doi.org/10.18745/th.27277
Funding
Default funderDefault project
Other links
http://hdl.handle.net/2299/27277Metadata
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