Model wind behavior with robust distribution metrics quickly. Compare speed bands, thresholds, and energy expectations. Turn site inputs into clear engineering probability insights today.
| Scenario | Model | k | c (m/s) | Target v (m/s) | Band (m/s) | Threshold (m/s) | Hours |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Coastal wind farm | Weibull | 2.10 | 9.20 | 12.00 | 8 - 14 | 4.00 | 8760 |
| Inland ridge | Weibull | 1.85 | 7.60 | 10.00 | 6 - 11 | 3.50 | 4380 |
| Preliminary site review | Rayleigh | 2.00 | 8.00 | 9.00 | 5 - 10 | 3.00 | 2160 |
Weibull probability density: f(v) = (k / c) × (v / c)k−1 × e−(v/c)k
Cumulative probability: F(v) = 1 − e−(v/c)k
Exceedance probability: P(V > v) = e−(v/c)k
Interval probability: P(v1 < V < v2) = e−(v1/c)k − e−(v2/c)k
Mean wind speed: v̄ = c × Γ(1 + 1/k)
Variance: σ² = c² × [Γ(1 + 2/k) − Γ²(1 + 1/k)]
Wind power density: WPD = 0.5 × ρ × c³ × Γ(1 + 3/k)
Expected rotor power: P = WPD × A
Rayleigh model: use k = 2 for a simplified special Weibull case.
The shape factor describes spread. Lower values indicate more variable wind behavior, while higher values indicate tighter clustering around the typical site speed.
Use Rayleigh when measured site data is limited and you want a quick first estimate. It assumes a shape factor of two.
Exceedance probability is the chance that wind speed will be greater than your selected target speed. It is useful for cut-in or survivability checks.
It shows how often wind falls inside a working band. That helps estimate turbine operating time, load exposure, and dispatch expectations.
No. It estimates available wind power across swept area. Real electrical output depends on turbine efficiency, controls, losses, and power curve limits.
Use meters per second for speed, kilograms per cubic meter for air density, square meters for rotor area, and hours for duration.
Yes, as a screening tool. For bankable energy studies, combine measured data, long-term correction, turbine power curves, and site losses.
Scale factor controls the characteristic speed of the wind regime. Because wind power rises roughly with speed cubed, small changes matter greatly.