Lidar Profiling of the Atmosphere

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Radar/lidar observations of boundary layer clouds
Advertisements

Cloud Radar in Space: CloudSat While TRMM has been a successful precipitation radar, its dBZ minimum detectable signal does not allow views of light.
ESTO Advanced Component Technology 11/17/03 Laser Sounder for Remotely Measuring Atmospheric CO 2 Concentrations GSFC CO 2 Science and Sounder.
Raman Spectroscopy A) Introduction IR Raman
Bragg’s Law nl=2dsinΘ Just needs some satisfaction!! d Θ l
Studying the Physical Properties of the Atmosphere using LIDAR technique Dinh Van Trung and Nguyen Thanh Binh, Nguyen Dai Hung, Dao Duy Thang, Bui Van.
Lecture 12 Content LIDAR 4/15/2017 GEM 3366.
Molecular Fluorescence Spectroscopy
Measured parameters: particle backscatter at 355 and 532 nm, particle extinction at 355 nm, lidar ratio at 355 nm, particle depolarization at 355 nm, atmospheric.
Introduction to Remote Sensing The Electromagnetic (EM) Spectrum.
Lesson17. Heterogeneous and cloud processes Wide range of physical and chemical of substrate surfaces for heterogeneous reactions to take place. Clouds.
Atmospheric Emission.
NDACC Working Group on Water Vapor NDACC Working Group on Water Vapor Bern, July 5 -7, 2006 Raman Lidar activities at Rome - Tor Vergata F.Congeduti, F.Cardillo,
Atmospheric structure from lidar and radar Jens Bösenberg 1.Motivation 2.Layer structure 3.Water vapour profiling 4.Turbulence structure 5.Cloud profiling.
Absorption and emission processes
Atmospheric Measurements at Capel Dewi field station Prof. Geraint Vaughan.
Radar: Acronym for Radio Detection and Ranging
Scanning Raman Lidar Error Characteristics and Calibration For IHOP David N. Whiteman/NASA-GSFC, Belay Demoz/UMBC Paolo Di Girolamo/Univ. of Basilicata,
Results obtained with the Tropospheric Ozone DIAL System Using a YAG Laser and Raman Cells (A53Q – 0439) J. T. Sullivan 1,2, T. J. McGee.
LIDAR Light Detection and Ranging Kate Whalen PHY 3903 Nov. 25, 2005.
Ben Kravitz November 5, 2009 LIDAR. What is LIDAR? Stands for LIght Detection And Ranging Micropulse LASERs Measurements of (usually) backscatter from.
David N. Whiteman/NASA-GSFC, Belay Demoz/UMBC
Lidar remote sensing for the characterization of the atmospheric aerosol on local and large spatial scale.
Lidar for Atmospheric Remote sensing
Project Overview Laser Spectroscopy Group A. A. Ruth Department of Physics, University College Cork, Cork, Ireland.
LIDAR: Introduction to selected topics
July 2001Zanjan, Iran1 Atmospheric Profilers Marc Sarazin (European Southern Observatory)
Geneva, September 2010 EARLINET-ASOS Symposium Second GALION Workshop Uncertainties evaluation for aerosol optical properties Aldo Amodeo CNR-IMAA.
Chapter 9 Electromagnetic Waves. 9.2 ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES.
GEWEX/GlobVapour Workshop, Mar 8-10, 2011, ESRIN, Frascati, Italy WATER VAPOUR RAMAN LIDARS IN THE UTLS: Where Are We Now? or “The JPL-Table Mountain Experience”
G O D D A R D S P A C E F L I G H T C E N T E R Goddard Lidar Observatory for Winds (GLOW) Wind Profiling from the Howard University Beltsville Research.
1 EE 543 Theory and Principles of Remote Sensing Derivation of the Transport Equation.
B. Gentry/GSFCSLWG 06/29/05 Scaling Ground-Based Molecular Direct Detection Doppler Lidar Measurements to Space Using Wind Profile Measurements from GLOW.
B.-M. Sinnhuber, Remote Sensing I, University of Bremen, Summer 2007 Remote Sensing I Active Remote Sensing Summer 2007 Björn-Martin Sinnhuber Room NW1.
Mike Newchurch 1, Shi Kuang 1, John Burris 2, Steve Johnson 3, Stephanie Long 1 1 University of Alabama in Huntsville, 2 NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center,
Measurement Example III Figure 6 presents the ozone and aerosol variations under a light-aerosol sky condition. The intensity and structure of aerosol.
Field Methods of Monitoring Atmospheric Systems Remote Sensing Copyright © 2006 by DBS.
Berechnung von Temperaturen aus Lidar-Daten Michael Gerding Leibniz-Institut für Atmosphärenphysik.
Wu Sponsors: National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Goddard Space Flight Center (GSFC) Goddard Institute for Space Studies (GISS) New York.
HEAPnet meeting, February 2007, Amsterdam Atmospheric corrections determined using Raman/backscatter lidar measurements 1 LIDAR Atmospheric corrections.
1/10 Tatsuya KUME Mechanical Engineering Center, High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) ATF2-IN2P3-KEK kick-off meeting (Oct. 10, 2006) Phase.
The Spectrum of EM Waves According to wavelength or frequency, the EM waves can be distinguished into various types. There is no sharp boundary.
LIDAR- Light Detection and Ranging  Lidar = “laser-radar”  RADAR-wavelengths: mm, cm  LIDAR-wavelengths: 250 nm-10 μm  Principle: short energetic pulses.
NASA ESTO ATIP Laser Sounder for Remotely Measuring Atmospheric CO 2 Concentrations 12/12/01 NASA Goddard - Laser Remote Sensing Branch 1 James B. Abshire,
Measurement Example III Figure 6 presents the ozone and aerosol variations under a light-aerosol sky condition. The intensity and structure of aerosol.
Chemistry XXI Unit 2 How do we determine structure? The central goal of this unit is to help you develop ways of thinking that can be used to predict the.
LIDAR Atmospheric Remote Sensing Junior Nkrumah Prof. Ben Herman Dept. of Engineering, CCNY Abstract Experimental setup Procedure Materials Results Discussion.
A new method for first-principles calibration
Ch 10 Pages ; Lecture 24 – Introduction to Spectroscopy.
Atmospheric Measurements: The Next Generation Laser Remote Sensor Russell Philbrick and Hans Hallen Physics Department and MEAS Department, NC State University,
Ceilometer absolute calibration to calculate aerosol extensive properties Giovanni Martucci Alexander Marc de Huu Martin Tschannen.
Light Detection and Ranging(LIDAR) BY: SONU SANGAM USN-1C07EC096 BRANCH-ECE SEM -VIII.
UNIVERSITY OF BASILICATA CNR-IMAA (Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche Istituto di Metodologie per l’Analisi Ambientale) Tito Scalo (PZ) Analysis and interpretation.
METR Advanced Atmospheric Radiation Dave Turner Lecture 11.
Early VALIDAR Case Study Results Rod Frehlich: RAL/NCAR Grady Koch: NASA Langley.
The importance of reliable depolarisation measurements
Aerosol extinction coefficient (Raman method)
LIDAR Ben Kravitz November 5, 2009.
Regional Radiation Center (RRC) II (Asia)
GEOGRAPHIC INFORMATION SYSTEMS & RS INTERVIEW QUESTIONS ANSWERS
Detection of IO in the MBL using an open-path CRDS
Practical Absorbance and Fluorescence Spectroscopy
Lidar Profiling of the Atmosphere
GAJENDRA KUMAR EC 3rd YR. ROLL NO
Raman Spectroscopy A) Introduction IR Raman
Introduction and Basic Concepts
PHY Lecture 16 Lidar remote sensing.
REMOTE SENSING.
The Layered Atmosphere:
An (almost) unexpected way to detect very thin diffuse (aged
Presentation transcript:

Lidar Profiling of the Atmosphere Geraint Vaughan University of Manchester, UK geraint.vaughan@manchester.ac.uk

Basic principles LIDAR – Light Detection and Ranging Similar principle to RADAR – pulses of light emitted into the atmosphere and scattered back by clouds, aerosols or air molecules Light collected by a telescope Spectrometers or interference filters isolate wavelength concerned Photon-counting or analogue detection Time-of-flight gives scattering height z=2ct z

What can we measure with lidar? Clouds Aerosol Water vapour Minor constituents e.g. ozone, hydrocarbons Temperature Wind (by Doppler-shifting) Lidars can be used from the ground, aircraft or from space

Properties of lidar as a remote sensing tool Advantages Disadvantages Good height and time resolution Backscattered signals readily interpreted May be mounted on trailers or aircraft for mobile operation Affected by cloud (light can’t get through) Background light is a problem in daytime Systems to observe the stratosphere tend to be large (and expensive) Precise alignment must be maintained

Example: Aberystwyth aerosol/water vapour lidar Transmitter Nd-YAG laser 355 nm X10 Beam expander (refracting telescope) To atmosphere From atmosphere Receiver

Transmitter characteristics High power pulsed laser (UV/Vis/IR) Typical pulse energy 10 – 400 mJ Typical rep rate 10 – 50 s-1 (much higher for excimer or copper vapour laser) Typical pulse length 3 ns (1 m) Linearly polarised Usually fixed wavelength – dye lasers and some solid state lasers tuneable. Neodymium-YAG lasers a popular choice (1.06µm, 532, 355, 266 nm)

Receiver characteristics Basically, focusing mirror to collect backscattered light. Size depends on application (e.g. 10 cm for low-level work, 1 m for stratosphere/mesosphere) Photomultipliers with photon-counting electronics best for linearity and sensitivity but dynamic range limited: analogue electronics can deliver this for large signals. Typical range resolution 30 m (min ~ 1 m) Time resolution can range from single pulse to several hours All equipment can be bought off-the-shelf these days.

P(λ,r) = P0 A E β(λ,r) exp-{ 2 0∫ Σ(λ,r’) dr’ } r The Lidar Equation Transmitted pulse power Backscatter coefficient of atmosphere r P(λ,r) = P0 A E β(λ,r) exp-{ 2 0∫ Σ(λ,r’) dr’ } r r2 Solid angle subtended by mirror Transmissivity of atmosphere: contributions to Σ from scattering by air and aerosols, absorption by gases Received power Efficiency of optics and electronics

Elastic scattering Simplest form of lidar λmeasured = λtransmitted Used for aerosol/ cloud measurements below 25 km and temperature above 25 km Can use a small (few mW) laser and 10 cm telescope for clouds Polarisation can distinguish different kinds of particles λmeasured = λtransmitted β is from air molecules and particles If there are no particles, β is from air alone and proportional to density Stratospheric aerosol measured with polarisation lidar, 9 Dec 2001

Aerosol Measurements Measure the backscatter coefficient β, usually as a ratio to the air backscatter coefficient. Lidar backscatter ratio = total backscattered signal/ backscatter from air alone; R = βtot / βair Backscatter from air calculated from a nearby radiosonde profile, or measured by Raman scattering or polarisation measurement – background stratospheric aerosol are spherical droplets which don’t depolarise laser beam; air does depolarise slightly. Dec 12 2001 (12 hours data) Lidar backscatter ratio measured at Aberystwyth using dual polarisation method Aerosol extinction must either be parameterised or measured using Raman scattering

Temperature measurements Above 30 km, atmosphere generally aerosol-free. Then lidar signal measures density. Use p = ρrT and dp/dz = -ρg Assume p and T at upper boundary of profile and solve equations by stepping down the profile. Within ~15 km effect of boundary condition negligible Can be used to measure T up to 80 km with very powerful systems. Extension to 100 km+ possible using resonance fluorescence Daily mean temperature measured at ALOMAR, Andoya, Jan 1998

Cloud measurements Airborne lidar measurements of cirrus outflow from thunderstorm near Darwin Backscatter (arbitrary scale) Path of in-situ aircraft (Egrett) Depolarisation Measurements from ARA King Air 23/11/02 – courtesy Jim Whiteway and Clive Cook

Raman Scattering Scattered light is shifted in wavelength by an amount specific to the molecule concerned Energy is exchanged with vibrational or rotational quantum states of molecules Used to measure water vapour, temperature and aerosol extinction Water: vibrational Raman. Laser at 355 nm, receivers at 407 nm (H2O) and 387 nm (N2) Temperature: Rotational Raman. Laser at 532 nm, receivers at 533 and 535 nm

Properties of Raman lidars Advantages Disadvantages Specific to particular molecules Ratio to N2 directly measures mixing ratio Insensitive to extinction Many systematic errors cancel in ratio Raman scattering is very weak Need large lidars For UTLS, measurements restricted to night-time Spectroscopic uncertainties

Rotational Raman Spectrum Interference Filters 210K 290K Wavelength, nm Wavelength, nm Raman scattering from nitrogen, relative intensity Raman scattering from oxygen, relative intensity

Water vapour measurements, Aberystwyth Dec 9 2001

Differential Absorption Used for ozone and other absorbers Transmit two wavelengths – one weakly and one strongly absorbed Difference in attenuation through the atmosphere gives absorber profile For ozone, we use laser at 266 nm shifted by Stimulated Raman Scattering to 289, 299 and 316 nm.

DIAL method P(λ,r).r2 α β(λ,r) exp-{2 ∫ Σ(λ,r) dr } Σ is the extinction coefficient of the atmosphere per unit length. In the absence of aerosols, Σ = σairnair + σmoleculenmolecule By measuring at two wavelengths with a large difference in σmolecule, and taking the ratio, the effect of that molecule can be isolated. Rat(r) = P(λ1,r)/P(λ2,r) = β(λ1,r)/β(λ2,r) exp –{ 2∫ Σ(λ1,r) - Σ(λ2,r) dr} The backscatter coefficients vary with distance in the same way for the two wavelengths, as these are determined by air and aerosol So d ln(Rat) /dr = - 2{σmoleculenmolecule + σair nair} Method gives absolute concentration

Ozone measurements, June 5 2000 Above: tropospheric measurements from 289/299 nm pair. Below: stratospheric measurements from 299 alone. (We now do DIAL with 299/316 for stratosphere)

Mobile 5-wavelength Ozone/aerosol lidar Supplied by elight, Germany Uses 266, 289, 299, 316 and 355 nm Ozone and aerosol profiles 100 m – 4 km Used on field campaigns

Ozone and aerosol profiles, Sept 24 2003

What else can you measure with DIAL? Courtesy of National Physical Laboratory, Teddington, UK

Summary Lidar technique allows continuous monitoring of profiles with good height resolution Different scattering mechanisms permit different kinds of measurement New technology offers more compact sources and development of transportable and mobile systems