Aerosol sensing from balloons using photopolarimetry

A photopolarimeter designed to measure the radiance and the polarization ratio at lambda equals 0.85 microns and lambda equals 1.65 microns is set up on a gondola of a stratospheric balloon. By rotating the gondola, measurements of the diffuse solar light are obtained for a wide range of the scatter...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Santer, R., Diallo, B. S., Herman, M.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 1991
Subjects:
46
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=19910023224
Description
Summary:A photopolarimeter designed to measure the radiance and the polarization ratio at lambda equals 0.85 microns and lambda equals 1.65 microns is set up on a gondola of a stratospheric balloon. By rotating the gondola, measurements of the diffuse solar light are obtained for a wide range of the scattering angles. An inversion scheme, based on the assumption of a log-normal size distribution, provides the relevant size parameters, the refractive index, and the slant optical thicknesses of the aerosols. Since 1983, this experiment was launched twice a year from Aire Sur Adour (S-E of France). The post-El Chichon atmospheric stratospheric aerosol proved to be quite stable in size and nature (hydratid sulfuric acid), but the abundance decreased by a factor of 10 between 1983 and 1987. The experiment was also launched to observe the stratosphere during the Arctic winter. Two flights, on January 28, 1988 and January 18, 1990, corresponded to an unperturbed atmosphere. But during a third flight, on April, 2, 1990, the temperatures were low enough for PCS formulations. A multilayer situation was observed with the standard H2SOH aerosols below 20 km; a dense layer was observed, peaked at around 23 km, with scattering coefficients about 50 times layer than in background conditions; and an upper layer was observed, rather sharp (approximately equal to 1 km), with micron sized particles.