Title: Horizontal wind speed and direction profiles from Doppler lidar Location: Belle Mina Site for Vortex-SE-2016 Lat/Lon: 34.690 degN, -86.885 degE Date updated: 15 August 2016 Contact: Dave Turner and Temple Lee, NOAA (dave.turner@noaa.gov, temple.lee@noaa.gov) System: Leosphere 100-S lidar, which was deployed by NOAA Air Resources Lab beside the CLAMPS-1 facility --- Background Doppler lidars transmit pulses of 1.5 um wavelength laser energy into the atmosphere, which scatters off aerosol particles and hydrometeors. The lidar measures the intensity of this return, as well as its radial velocity. The lidar has a scanner which allows the system to scan anywhere in the hemisphere, and typically a fixed scan strategy is used. These data were derived from plane-parallel-indicator (PPI) scans, which were collected approximately every 2 minutes. In this scan, data were collected at 5 different azimuths each at 45 degrees elevation. These data were processed using the velocity-azimuth-display (VAD) technique by Dave Turner. The RMS field in the file indicates the goodness-of-fit to the assumed sine wave, and large values of RMS (e.g., > 2) denote times/heights where the data should not be trusted. This dataset was collected north of Belle Mina, Alabama, during the VORTEX-SE-2016 field campaign. This lidar is the Leosphere 100-S system. This lidar was deployed directly beside the Collaborative Lower Atmospheric Mobile Profiling System (CLAMPS-1). It started operations on 11 March and continued until May 2. --- END