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Lidar remote sensing of tropospheric pollutants and trace gases - Programs of NASA Langley Research CenterNASA Langley Research Center is engaged in a number of in-house and contracted programs to develop, evaluate, and apply lidar techniques to remote measurements of pollutant gases, trace molecules, and aerosols. The differential absorption lidar (DIAL) research programs include the development and evaluation of a UV DIAL system for remote measurements of SO2 and O3 concentrations and aerosol dispersion in urban and power-plant stack plumes, a near-IR DIAL system for vertical measurements of water vapor concentrations, and a high-power tunable IR DIAL system which will measure the concentration of gas species that have absorption features in the 1.4- to 4.4-micron wavelength range. The lidar programs which deal with aerosol measurements include the evaluation of a mobile ruby lidar system for use in plume dispersion model verification and the development of a high-spectral-resolution lidar system for measurement of aerosol extinction and backscattering coefficients. System characteristics and measurement sensitivities are discussed, and comparisons are made between simulations and experimental results.
Document ID
19790031059
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Browell, E. V.
(NASA Langley Research Center Hampton, Va., United States)
Date Acquired
August 9, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1978
Subject Category
Instrumentation And Photography
Meeting Information
Meeting: In: Joint Conference on Sensing of Environmental Pollutants
Location: New Orleans, LA
Start Date: November 6, 1977
End Date: November 11, 1977
Accession Number
79A15072
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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