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Airborne measurements of CO2 column absorption and range using a pulsed direct-detection integrated path differential absorption lidar
Author(s) -
James B. Abshire,
Haris Riris,
C. J. Weaver,
Jianping Mao,
Graham Allan,
William Hasselbrack,
E. V. Browell
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
applied optics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2155-3165
pISSN - 1559-128X
DOI - 10.1364/ao.52.004446
Subject(s) - optics , lidar , materials science , absorption (acoustics) , attenuation coefficient , range (aeronautics) , remote sensing , absorption spectroscopy , physics , geology , composite material
We report on airborne CO(2) column absorption measurements made in 2009 with a pulsed direct-detection lidar operating at 1572.33 nm and utilizing the integrated path differential absorption technique. We demonstrated these at different altitudes from an aircraft in July and August in flights over four locations in the central and eastern United States. The results show clear CO(2) line shape and absorption signals, which follow the expected changes with aircraft altitude from 3 to 13 km. The lidar measurement statistics were also calculated for each flight as a function of altitude. The optical depth varied nearly linearly with altitude, consistent with calculations based on atmospheric models. The scatter in the optical depth measurements varied with aircraft altitude as expected, and the median measurement precisions for the column varied from 0.9 to 1.2 ppm. The altitude range with the lowest scatter was 8-10 km, and the majority of measurements for the column within it had precisions between 0.2 and 0.9 ppm.

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