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THOR System: Cloud THickness from Offbeam lidar Returns Co-Investigators:Robert Cahalan/913 & Matthew McGill/912 Chief Engineer:John Kolasinski/565 Optical.

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Presentation on theme: "THOR System: Cloud THickness from Offbeam lidar Returns Co-Investigators:Robert Cahalan/913 & Matthew McGill/912 Chief Engineer:John Kolasinski/565 Optical."— Presentation transcript:

1 THOR System: Cloud THickness from Offbeam lidar Returns Co-Investigators:Robert Cahalan/913 & Matthew McGill/912 Chief Engineer:John Kolasinski/565 Optical Engineer:Luis Ramos-Izquierdo/924, SSAI  Source: 523 nm, 300 uJ, 1 kHz  Detector: 6° FoV, 25.4 mm focal plane  Annular concentric bundles  Photon Counter Detectors (10)  Data System from Cloud Lidar Conventional lidars “see” only thin cloud,  < 2 For  > 2, most reflection diffuse    Space laser spotsize > 100 meters Why study diffuse signal? THOR System

2 THOR Proof of Concept  Initial obs with Spinhirne Lidar   Signal detected in daytime out to 12° !  No angular averaging, only time-average  Realistic thicknesses “Cloud” properties  r eff, H) known Realistic sizes, mfp ÷ 1000 ≈ 10 cm Scale ~ Sqrt ( mfp*  ) Laboratory “Clouds”  Real Clouds 

3 THOR Fiber Bundle Array 1. Micropulse lidar: 523 nm, 300 uJ, 1 kHz 2. GSFC-designed Telescope: 6° FoV, 25.4 mm f.p. 3. Annular bundles O.D.  2 n  constant signal 4. Hamamatsu Photon-counting PMT Detectors 25.4 mm OD, roughly 250,000 fibers ea. 50  m OD (200  m center) Eight concentric rings, doubling in radius Outer in 3 sectors, 50,000 fibers each. Rings 3 - 7: OD = 0.8, 1.6, 3.2, 6.4, 12.7 mm Improved version: >> concentricity >> homogeneity 1 2 3 4

4 THOR System Telescope designed at Goddard, built by Model Optics, MA Bundle designed at Goddard, built by FiberOptic Systems, CA Hamamatsu Detectors  Data System - Cloud Lidar heritage 2. Telescope 3. Fiber Bundle 4. PMT’s 1. 523 nm Lidar Expander Steerer, 5. Data System Optics aligned on collimator First Msmts planned for March

5 Fiber Imaging on Collimator 39 fibers in Ring 2, but ~150,000 in Ring 8 Improvements planned under DDF Goal : errors < 1% concentric, < 5% uniform

6 Data Acquisition DAQ cards dev under contract for Cloud Lidar Data system upgradeable for ER-2 Timing goal: 15 m range gates

7 THOR “First Light” - March 8, 2001 1 2 3 8 7 4 5 6

8 THOR Road Map TimeActivityResources Summer ‘01Ground-based 1 GSFC, Wallops Spring ‘02THOR Val on P3 2 Wallops  ARM site –P3 at 30 K ft, cloud top below 5 K ft. –ARM MPL cloud base, 30 m resolution Fall ‘03THOR ER-2 Certification Spring ‘03THOR ER-2 Mission radar, A-band Summer ‘03co-fly AMSR on P3 3 Antarctic night 1.Possible MPL overflights with THOR on ground 2.Engineering model on P3, upgrade for ER2, or WB57, etc 3.Co-fly w/ Aqua val, Antarctica:’03 (J. Comiso)

9 THOR-Val Experiment at ARM/SGP ItemResources THOR Aircraft 1 NASA-P3 –Mounting and laborWallops –Dedicated P3 is $3.6 K per flight hour –20 hours at DoE/ARM/SGP  $72 KMcConnell AFB, Wichita P3 over ARM SGP 2 MPL, Radar –Thickness accuracydz ~ 30 m, dx ~ 500 m –Time on site10 days –Suggested TimeframeSpring 2002 Later: ER-2 Validation Activities Onboard: Cl.Radar, Cloud Lidar, A-band Testing & Certification 4 1.Initial engineering flights on P3, upgrade 4 ER-2 2.THOR  Wallops may enable overflights 3.Co-fly w/ Aqua val, Antarctica: ‘02,’03 (Comiso) 4.ER-2 Cert requirements

10 THOR Challenge: Wide-angle Solar Filter Source TypeIV, Nd:YALO, 540 nm Repetition Rate1 kHz Pulse Energy170  J Pulse Width 8 ns Beam Waist4 mm Beam Divergence215  rad Detectors Telescope8” f/1.25, 6° FoV, ~42°@1” f.p. Channel 1d1 = 200  m Channels 2 –7dn = 2 X dn-1 Channels 8–10120° sectors, d8 = 25.6 mm PMTsHamamatsu, single photon Data System215  rad Problem: How to filter Sun = 10 8 *signal? Need ±0.01 nm for 6° FoV. Dispersion filter selects wavelength by selecting angle. –Requires collimated beam. Faraday cell rotates polarization plane to select wavelength. –Faraday cell successfully used on ground. –Air/satellite use of magnetic fields problematic due to shielding and power. In space FoV ~ 1 milli radian. Wide angle solar filters might use other polarization effects, e.g. birefringence. Wideangle filters have other applications, e.g. filter out Earth in communications.


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