1 / 21

Active Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere - Lidar -

Active Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere - Lidar -. Remote Sensing I Lecture 9 Summer 2006. LIDAR (L i ght Detection And Ranging). Idea:

fay
Download Presentation

Active Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere - Lidar -

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Active Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere - Lidar - Remote Sensing I Lecture 9 Summer 2006

  2. LIDAR (Light Detection And Ranging) • Idea: • Use of an active system that emits light pulses and measures the intensity of the backscattered light (from air molecules, aerosols, thin clouds) as a function of time (optical Radar) • Instrument: • a strong laser with short pulses • possibly several wavelengths emitted • a large telescope to collect the weak signal • Measurement quantity: • time lag gives altitude information (z = 1/2 t c, with c speed of light) • signal intensity gives information on backscattering at given altitude and extinction along the light path • measurements at different wavelengths provide information on absorbers and aerosol types • polarisation measurements provide information on phase of scatterers • => Very good vertical resolution can be achieved!

  3. Review: Scattering in the Atmosphere Summary Mie and Rayleigh Scattering

  4. Comparison of Rayleigh and Mie phase functions • The larger the size parameter, • the larger the forward scattering • peak Fig. from Liu, An introduction to atmospheric radiation

  5. LIDAR-Types and Target Quantities • Applications: • altimeter • Rayleigh Lidar: temperature • DIAL (Differential Absorption)-Lidar: trace gases • multi wavelength aerosol Lidar: aerosol amount and aerosol properties (size distribution, type) • Raman-Lidar: trace gases • Doppler-Lidar: particle velocities • Fluorescence-Lidar: temperature in the upper atmosphere

  6. LIDAR: Instrument • Laser: • short pulses (small dead range above instrument) • high pulse power (high backscattered signal) • typical lasers: • solid state laser (e.g. Nd-YAG) • gas laser (e.g. XeCl) • dye lasers • Detector: • excellent quantum efficiency needed (low signal) • low noise needed (low signal) • typical detectors • Photomultiplier • Photodiodes • CCDs • wavelength selective (use of filters)

  7. LIDAR: Example G. Beyerle, PhD thesis, 1994

  8. LIDAR: Measurement Example • two wavelengths (353 nm and 532 nm • minimum altitude: 11 km • maximum altitude: 45 km • background signals of calibration • exponential scale • signature of volcanic aerosol • signature of PSCs

  9. Lidar equation • The detected intensity Pd(z,λ) is proportinal to • Emitted intensity • Backscatter coefficient • Observed solid angle (with A area of telescope) • Transmission along the light path • Sensitivity of the detector in this channel (including geometric overlap):

  10. Lidar equation Taking these factors together will give the so calledLidar-Equation: with

  11. DIAL LIDAR • Idea: • two wavelengths are emitted, one at an absorption line, the other one off the absorption but close enough to have small changes in scattering properties and absorption by other absorbers • Application: • ozone profiles • H2O profiles http://www.etl.noaa.gov/et2/

  12. Forming the ratio between the received signals Pon and Poff: ... And then the logarithm:: DIAL Lidar equation Start from the Lidar-equation for two wavelength on/off:

  13. If the two wavelength are nearby, scattering properties will be Similar, and we finally get: DIAL Lidar equation Differentiating wrt altitude z gives:

  14. DIAL LIDAR: Examples Tropospheric O3 Stratospheric O3

  15. Aerosol LIDAR • Idea: • Backscattering at different wavelengths is used to derive information on aerosol properties • for each wavelength, the backscattering coefficient βMie(z, λ) is computed from the Lidar equation using the Klett-algorithm: • profiles of temperature and pressure as Input • use of reference height with known backscatter coefficient (Rayleigh only) • Mie scattering ratio determined from model: LMie(z, λ)= αMie(z, λ)/ βMie(z, λ) • Measurement quantity is the backscattering ratio R.

  16. Aerosol Lidar: Example PSC

  17. Aerosol Lidar: Example Cirrus Clouds • airborne lidar measurements • OLEX instrument (http://www.dlr.de/~flentje/olex.html ) • very good detection limit • high spatial and vertical resolution • detection of cirrus clouds, thin and even “subvisible“ • particle size from colour ratio • particle phase from depolarisation

  18. LIDAR: Overview

  19. Lidar In-space Technology Experiment (LITE) • Instrument: • flashlamp-pumped Nd:YAG laser • 1064 nm, 532 nm, and 355 nm • 1-meter diameter lightweight telescope • PMT for 355 nm and 532 nmavalanche photodiode (APD) for 1064 nm • Mission Aims: • test and demonstrate lidar measurements from space • collect measurements on • clouds • aerosols (stratospheric & tropospheric) • surface reflectance • Operation: • on Discovery in September 1994 as part of the STS-64 mission • 53 hours operation http://www-lite.larc.nasa.gov/index.html

  20. LITE: Example of Aerosol Measurements Clouds (ITCZ) Atlas mountains complex aerosol layer maritime aerosol layer http://www-lite.larc.nasa.gov/index.html

  21. More LIDARS in space • ICESat (January 12, 2003) • 532 nanometer lidar • ice sheet mass balance • aerosol and cloud heights • vegetation and land topography • http://icesat.gsfc.nasa.gov/ • CALIPSO (2005?) • 532 nm and 1064 nm) polarization-sensitive lidar • clouds and aerosols • http://www-calipso.larc.nasa.gov/ • WALES (2008?) • water vapour DIAL • high resolution water vapour profiles • http://www.esa.int/export/esaLP/ASE77YNW9SC_wales_0.html

More Related