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1 March 2011 Measuring Aeolian Saltation: A Comparison of Sensors
Douglas J. Sherman, Bailiang Li, Eugene J. Farrell, Jean T. Ellis, Walter D. Cox, Luís P. Maia, Paulo H. G. O. Sousa
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Abstract

We report the results of field experiments designed to compare four types of aeolian saltation sensors: the Safire; the Wenglor® Particle Counter; the Miniphone; and the Buzzer Disc. Sets of sensors were deployed in tight spatial arrays and sampled at rates as fast as 20 kHz. In two of the three trials, the data from the sensors are compared to data obtained from sand traps. The Miniphone and the Buzzer Disc, based on microphone and piezoelectric technologies, respectively, produced grain impact counts comparable to those derived from the trap data. The Safire and the Wenglor® Particle Counter produce count rates that were an order of magnitude too slow. Safires undercount because of their large momentum threshold and because its signal is saturated at relatively slow transport rates. We conclude that the Miniphone and the Buzzer Disc are appropriate for deployment as grain counters because their small size allows them to be installed in closely-spaced sets.

Douglas J. Sherman, Bailiang Li, Eugene J. Farrell, Jean T. Ellis, Walter D. Cox, Luís P. Maia, and Paulo H. G. O. Sousa "Measuring Aeolian Saltation: A Comparison of Sensors," Journal of Coastal Research 2011(10059), 280-290, (1 March 2011). https://doi.org/10.2112/SI59-030.1
Received: 5 October 2009; Accepted: 12 April 2010; Published: 1 March 2011
KEYWORDS
Buzzer Disc
Miniphone
Safire
sand traps
transport rate
Wenglor® Particle Counter
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