School of Physical, Environmental and Mathematical Sciences

David Low

Dr David Low

Lecturer, CDF Student Program Coordinator
BSc, PhD Adelaide, MAIP, MAMOS, MAGU

 

Telephone: +61 2 6268 8739
Fax: +61 2 6268 8786
Email:d.low@adfa.edu.au
Location: PEMS Sth, Room 121a


My UNSW Research Gateway Profile

Research Interests:
The algorithmic extraction of useful parameters (temperature, moisture, turbulence, etc) from atmospheric echoes: the process of modelling what contributes to electromagnetic and acoustic echoes from the atmosphere, and separating the individual contributions from each other.

Instrumental comparisons: how different sensors see the same parcel of air in different ways. In particular, how turbulence is seen by different instruments.

Lower Atmosphere Research Group - Monitoring the atmospheric boundary layer

Science Education - Physics Education

Biography

I obtained my degrees (PhD 1996) from the University of Adelaide, with honours and doctoral work in radar studies of the lower atmosphere on the Buckland Park VHF radar with Bob Vincent and Iain Reid. Most of this work looked at the upper troposphere, pretty evenly split between VHF radar performance characteristics (Low et al., Proc. 8th Int. MST Workshop pp 294-297, 1998) and mesoscale meteorology (Griffiths et al., QJRMS vol. 124 pp 1109-1132, 1998).

I then spent two years (1996-1997) as a postdoc at the Radio Atmospheric Science Center of Kyoto University (subsequently called the Radio Science Center for Space and Atmosphere, and now part of the scarily-named Research Institute for a Sustainable Humanosphere), working on the MU radar with Toshitaka Tsuda. I looked at extracting tropospheric turbulence parameters with a novel combination of radar and acoustics (the Radio Acoustic Sounding System, or RASS) (Low et al., Met. Zeit. vol. 7 pp 345-354, 1998), and explored how one might determine atmospheric moisture profiles from the radar/RASS combination (Low and Tsuda, Proc. 5th Int. Sym. on Tropospheric Profiling pp 101-103, 2000).

I started at UNSW@ADFA in 1998, working with John Taylor in the Lower Atmosphere Research Group on radar and sodar studies of the boundary layer. We have developed an integrated observing system, combining mini-sodars, sodars and UHF profiler (Taylor et al., Bull. Aust. Meteorol. Ocean. Soc. vol. 13 pp 111-116, 2000), and applied this system to measurements of boundary layer stability (Taylor et al., Meteorol. Atmos. Phys. vol. 85 pp 101-113, 2004), mesoscale model verification (Taylor et al., Proc. 16th AIP Congress, 2005) and studying surge-like intrusions propagating from the coast through Canberra to Wagga Wagga (Taylor et al., Aust. Met. Mag., submitted 2005). Thanks to a $500,000 ARC Discovery Grant (DP0558793), we installed two sodars at Weipa in Far North Queensland during September-December 2005 (looking at convection initiated by the convergence of east-coast and west-coast seabreezes). Most recently, we operated a sodar at Normanton (near the south-eastern corner of the Gulf of Carpentaria in Queensland), studying the Morning Glory phenomenon.

Teaching

As part of the Physics major, I taught the second year Physics waves and electromagnetism course from 1998-2004; and the second year Physics meteorology course from 1999-2004. I will teach the third year Physics atmospheric dynamics course for the first time in 2005.

I have taught the meteorology service course to the B.Tech (Aero) degree from 1998 to the present, and the first session meteorology service course for the B. Tech (Aviation) degree since its inception in 2002 (co-developed with Alistair Drake, who teaches the second session course). The meteorology service courses were opened up to fourth year B. Eng (Civil, Aero, Mech) students in 2001 as an elective.

I was Convenor of the First Year Physics Teaching Laboratory over 2000-2006, responsible for the design, development and coordination of the first year laboratory program to both Physics major and Engineering service courses. The Physics and Electrical Engineering streams (which comprise eight 3-hour sessions) run "cafeteria" style - a self-paced, open-choice, accumulation-style laboratory experience. The Engineering stream involves four 3-hour experiments. All streams have access to pre-lab quizzes in the WebCT online learning environment to help with their preparation; and all experiments have a Checkpoint marking/feedback scheme which allows for (near-)continuous assessment. The thrust of the first year Physics laboratory is "experimental science as a field in its own right", and while most experiments support particular lecture/theory themes, there are a number of stand-alone experiments.

I'm active in teaching-related research, primarily though the Physics Education Group (PEG) of the Australian Institute of Physics (AIP). I chaired the Education Program Subcommittee for the 16th AIP Congress (Canberra, 2005), and have been PEG's ACT representative since 2002. I am a Working Party member of the Learning Outcomes and Curriculum Development in Physics project, which was funded to the tune of $160,000 over 2004-2005 by the Carrick Institute (formerly the Australian Universities Teaching Committee (AUTC)).

Stage 1 of the AUTC project has been published as a commissioned report.

Research

Lower atmosphere profiling (wind, temperature, humidity); VHF/UHF radar wind profilers; radio acoustic sounding (RASS); radar meteorology; mesoscale meteorology; frontal dynamics; gravity waves; turbulence.

In particular, I'm fascinated by the extraction of useful parameters from atmospheric echoes: that is, the process of modelling what contributes to echoes, and separating them from each other. I guess this is one step deeper than the "inverse problem" (extracing refractive index variations from ray paths): I'm interested in extracting the individuals contributions to the refractive index variations due to (e.g.) temperature and moisture, as well as quantifying the degree of turbulent variation, in atmospheric profiles. Related to this interest is instrumental comparisions: how different sensors see the same parcel of air in different ways. Most recently, I've been interested in how turbulence is seen by different instruments - a subject that was explored by Marija Jovanovich in her honours thesis (2004), which I co-supervised. Past work is described in the Biography section.

Recently, the Australian Research Council awarded $500,000 (DP0558793) to myself and collaborators (Michael Reeder and Simon Clarke [Monash], Greg Holland [Aerosonde/NASA Goddard] and Roger Smith [Munich]) to explore "Predicting Organised Tropical Convection" over 2005-2007. We plan to install the UNSW@ADFA profilers at Weipa in Far North Queensland during December 2005, to study the Northern Australian Cloud Line.

My other love is what might be termed "small science": the sort of project you could give to a third-year student and expect them to achieve a useful and/or novel result. Examples of previous projects I've sponsored include:

If you're after more than just the executive summary, you can have a look at research projects that I've got simmering away.

Collaborators

Select Publications

Publications

Book Chapters
Refereed Papers
Unrefereed Papers and Extended Abstracts
Conference Papers and Abstracts

Memberships