Wind speed vertical distribution at Mt. Graham
S. Hagelin, E. Masciadri, F. Lascaux

TL;DR
This study characterizes the vertical wind speed distribution at Mt. Graham over 10 years, showing the importance of detailed profiles for astronomical applications and demonstrating the reliability of mesoscale models for nightly predictions.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive 10-year climatological analysis of wind speed profiles at Mt. Graham and validates mesoscale models for accurate nightly wind speed estimations.
Findings
Wind speed distribution is well-characterized over 10 years.
Mesoscale models reliably estimate nightly wind profiles.
Vertical wind profiles are crucial for adaptive optics and telescope stability.
Abstract
The characterization of the wind speed vertical distribution V(h) is fundamental for an astronomical site for many different reasons: (1) the wind speed shear contributes to trigger optical turbulence in the whole troposphere, (2) a few of the astroclimatic parameters such as the wavefront coherence time (tau_0) depends directly on V(h), (3) the equivalent velocity V_0, controlling the frequency at which the adaptive optics systems have to run to work properly, depends on the vertical distribution of the wind speed and optical turbulence. Also, a too strong wind speed near the ground can introduce vibrations in the telescope structures. The wind speed at a precise pressure (200 hPa) has frequently been used to retrieve indications concerning the tau_0 and the frequency limits imposed to all instrumentation based on adaptive optics systems, but more recently it has been proved that V_200…
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