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Comparison of Lidar Methods for Remote Measurement of Air PollutantsThis paper presents quantitative comparisons of several single-ended lidar techniques for the remote measurement of gaseous pollutants. These techniques are divided into two groups. The first group is based on the measurement of energy scattered directly by the gas of interest. The gaseous scattering processes considered are ordinary fluorescence, resonance fluorescence (also called resonance scattering), Raman scattering, and resonant (or nearly resonant) Raman scattering. The second group is based on the measurement of a characteristic differential absorption produced by the gas of interest at two discrete wavelengths, using energy scattered back toward the receiver by a remote reflector other than the gas of interest. The remote reflector may be intermixed with the gas of interest, as is the case with aerosols and atmospheric gases (principally nitrogen), or they may be fixed reflectors such as terrestrial objects or retroflectors. The detectability of a given material will depend on the magnitude and characteristics of the optical interaction with that material. The main characteristics of interest are the cross section, the response time, and the spectral response of the material relative to both the transmit and receive functions of the lidar. These characteristics and their implications for remote sensing will be reviewed for the four direct scatter processes and for the differential absorption technique. The characteristic behavior of the direct backscatter technique is different from the differential absorption technique with respect to sensitivity, concentration of material, and the effect of range. For these reasons, the direct backscatter processes cannot be compared directly to the differential absorption technique. The two techniques can be compared for specific material and system configurations, however. This paper describes specific lidar system configurations and gives the calculated performance level for these systems in both the direct backscatter and differential absorption modes for a wide variety of pollutant monitoring situations. The results of this comparison of techniques indicate that the differential- absorption lidar technique can provide adequate range and sensitivity for a wide variety of pollution monitoring applications involving a number of interesting pollutant materials. No other single technique appears to provide these capabilities for such a wide range of materials.
Document ID
20160007607
Acquisition Source
Langley Research Center
Document Type
Abstract
Authors
Wright, M. L.
(Stanford Research Inst. Menlo Park, CA, United States)
Proctor, E. K.
(Stanford Research Inst. Menlo Park, CA, United States)
Liston, E. M.
(Stanford Research Inst. Menlo Park, CA, United States)
Date Acquired
June 15, 2016
Publication Date
June 4, 1973
Publication Information
Publication: Fifth Conference on Laser Radar Studies of the Atmosphere, June 4-6, 1973, Hilton Inn, Williamsburg, Virginia: Conference Abstracts
Subject Category
Meteorology And Climatology
Earth Resources And Remote Sensing
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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