1 July 1997 Rayleigh lidar system for middle atmosphere research in the arctic
Jeffrey P. Thayer, Norman B. Nielsen, Russell E. Warren, Craig Heinselman, Jens Sohn
Author Affiliations +
A Rayleigh/Mie lidar system deployed at the Sondrestrom Atmospheric Research Facility located on the west coast of Greenland near the town of Kangerlussuaq (67.0 deg N, 50.9 deg W) has been in operation since 1993 making unique observations of the arctic middle atmosphere. The vertically directed lidar samples the elastically backscattered laser energy from molecules (Rayleigh) and aerosols (Mie) over the altitude range from 15 to 90 km at high spatial resolution. The limited amount of arctic observations of the middle atmosphere currently available emphasizes the importance and utility of a permanent Rayleigh lidar system in Greenland. The lidar system consists of a frequencydoubled, 17-W Nd:YAG laser at 532 nm, a 92 cm Newtonian telescope, and a two-channel photon counting receiver. The principal objective of the lidar project is to contribute to studies concerned with the climatology and phenomenology of the arctic middle atmosphere. To this end, we describe the lidar system in detail, evaluate system performance, describe data analysis, and discuss the system capabilities in determining the density, temperature, and the presence of aerosols in the arctic middle atmosphere. Particular emphasis is placed on the derivation of temperature from the lidar measurement and on the impact of signalinduced noise on this analysis. Also, we develop a statistical filter based on a Bayesian approach to optimally smooth the lidar profile in range. This filter preserves the short-term fluctuations in the low-altitude data consisting of relatively high SNR, whereas more smoothing is applied to the high-altitude data as the SNR decreases.
Jeffrey P. Thayer, Norman B. Nielsen, Russell E. Warren, Craig Heinselman, and Jens Sohn "Rayleigh lidar system for middle atmosphere research in the arctic," Optical Engineering 36(7), (1 July 1997). https://doi.org/10.1117/1.601361
Published: 1 July 1997
Lens.org Logo
CITATIONS
Cited by 44 scholarly publications and 3 patents.
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
LIDAR

Error analysis

Backscatter

Signal detection

Clouds

Interference (communication)

Aerosols

Back to Top