What is already known:
What this study adds:
Abstract:
Lidar scans can obtain data with high temporal resolution but they can only measure radial velocities, which can lead to inaccurate measurements for wind velocities and turbulence. To improve the performance of future lidar scans in various environments, this study collected data on the accuracy of different scanning strategies’ retrievals under particular wind conditions. A virtual lidar took measurements from the output of large-eddy simulations with different initial vertical wind shears, using a variety of scanning techniques whose results were compared. The retrievals from each scan were used to calculate the component winds and variances, which were then analyzed on how closely they matched the true wind values of the simulations. The scanning strategies tested were different Doppler beam swinging (DBS) and velocity-azimuth display (VAD) scans with modified elevation angles and numbers of beams, as well as the six-beam method. The scans were judged based on the mean and instantaneous root-mean-square errors (RMSEs) between their observations and the actual winds. While there is no single scanning strategy that always got the best results for every wind component, the 8-point VAD with a vertical beam method got the best average wind velocity and turbulence results, and the VAD scans overall did a better job than the DBS scans. Additionally, techniques that were tested with multiple elevation angles got the most consistently accurate wind observations from scans done at 60° and 50°. The findings also show that it is difficult to measure vertical velocity variance accurately unless the lidar scan includes a 90° beam.