OU-PRIME
OU-PRIME (Polarimetric Radar for Innovations in Meteorology and Engineering) was an advanced Doppler weather radar. It was completed in January 2009 after a ten-month construction period and commissioned on April 4, 2009.[1][2] It is operated by the Advanced Radar Research Center (ARRC) at the University of Oklahoma (OU). The radar was manufactured by Enterprise Electronics Corporation to provide OU students and faculty a platform for research and education in the field of radar meteorology. This C-band polarimetric radar has some of the highest resolution data of any C-band weather radar in the United States.[1][2][3][4]





OU-PRIME was struck by lightning on 19 March 2012 around 9:20am local time. Since then, the radar has not been operated due to damage.[5]
System characteristics
    
OU-PRIME, aka OU', is located on the Research Campus of the University of Oklahoma within walking distance of the National Weather Center building. Through a unique design, OU-PRIME can provide real-time time-series data providing opportunities for rapid developments in radar signal processing algorithms. Because of its C-band wavelength and 1 MW transmit power, OU-PRIME is extremely sensitive to clouds with approximately 10 dB more sensitivity over the NEXRAD system (S-band).
Characteristics:[4]
- Location 35°10′48.8″N 97°26′0.6″W
 - Radiating Center Height is 80 feet (24.4 m)
 - Operating frequency: 5510 MHz (C-band)
- Wavelength: 5.44 cm
 - Pulse Length: 0.4, 0.8, 1.0, 2.0 µs
 - Pulse Repetition Frequency: 300–2000 Hz, 1 Hz step
 
 - 1 MW Peak Power (magnetron with solid-state modulator)
 - 8.5-meter Andrew precision C-band dish
- High angular resolution: 0.45 degrees @ -3 dB points
 - Gain: 50 dBi
 - Sidelobe Level: Better than -26 dB one-way
 - Cross-Pol: Better than -30 dB
 
 - Rotation rate: 6-25 deg/s under typical scanning (30 deg/s max)
 - Minimum Detectable Signal: -112 dBm
- Radar Sensitivity: -15 dBZ at 50 km
 - Noise Figure: 3 dB
 
 - Simultaneous dual-polarization
 - Flexible computing platform for real-time algorithm development
 - Real-time I/Q data recording/processing
- A/D converter resolution: 16 bit
 - Receiver bandwidth: 6 MHz
 - Gate spacing: 25–500 m
 - Number of range gates: up to 2200
 - Clutter suppression: 60 dB (automatic detection/suppression using CLEAN-AP )
 - Advanced signal processing framework based on new STEP algorithm, including clutter estimation/suppression and multi-lag moment estimation
 
 
Research and educational pursuits
    
- An integral part of OU's Weather Radar Curriculum[6]
 - Non-precipitating cloud studies
 - Advanced signal processing algorithm development (e.g. Doppler spectrum)
 - Weather radar polarimetry / QPE
 - Next-generation digital receiver design
 - Severe weather detection algorithms based on spectral processing
 - Precipitation microphysics
 - Radar-based aerobiology
 - Adaptive real-time processing
 - Cloud physics and electrification
 - Storm dynamics
 
External links
    
References
    
- Advanced Radar Research Center (April 3, 2009). "THE UNIVERSITY OF OKLAHOMA TO HOLD COMMISSIONING CEREMONY FOR NEWEST RADAR" (pdf). University of Oklahoma. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
 - Clark Foy (January 2009). "Hi-def radar comes to South Campus". The Oklahoma Daily. Archived from the original on 2009-05-23. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
 - Bryan Painter (March 7, 2009). "OU-PRIME captures information from February tornado". The Oklahoman Direct. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
 - Advanced Radar Research Center. "OU-PRIME" (pdf). University of Oklahoma. Retrieved 2009-04-15.
 - https://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-blogs/weathermatrix/videos-lightning-hits-radar-power-transformers/44648
 - https://web.archive.org/web/20080917172519/http://arrc.ou.edu/education/