Vertically Resolved Retrievals of Aerosol Concentrations and Effective Radii from the DOE Combined HSRL and Raman lidar Measurement Study (CHARMS) Merged High-Spectral-Resolution Lidar-Raman Lidar Data Set

The Department of Energy’s (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Climate Research Facility is a key component of DOE’s research strategy to address global climate change. The objective of the ARM Facility is to provide an experimental testbed for studying important atmospheric effects, parti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ferrare, Richard A, Thorsen, Tyler, Clayton, Marian, Muller, Detlef, Chemyakin, Eduard, Burton, Sharon, Goldsmith, John, Holz, Robert, Kuehn, Ralph, Eloranta, Edwin, Marais, Willem, Newsom, Rob
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
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Online Access:http://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1413741
https://www.osti.gov/biblio/1413741
https://doi.org/10.2172/1413741
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Summary:The Department of Energy’s (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Climate Research Facility is a key component of DOE’s research strategy to address global climate change. The objective of the ARM Facility is to provide an experimental testbed for studying important atmospheric effects, particularly cloud and aerosol processes, and testing parameterizations of these processes for use in climate change models. ARM observational sites include a broad array of instruments to characterize cloud and aerosol properties, atmospheric state variables, and incoming and outgoing radiation. Advanced lidar systems provide valuable and unique information about the atmospheric column. We examine the potential for providing vertically resolved information about aerosol size and concentration with a combination of two such lidar systems, the Raman lidar and the High-Spectral-Resolution Lidar (HSRL). Currently ARM has a limited ability to remotely measure profiles of aerosol optical and microphysical properties on an operational basis. Although the Southern Great Plains (SGP), Eastern North Atlantic (ENA), and North Slope of Alaska (NSA, Oliktok Point location only) Raman lidars provide profiles of aerosol backscatter and extinction at 355 nm, additional information is required to better characterize the impacts of aerosols on radiation and clouds. Recent advances in lidar retrieval theory and algorithm development (Müller et al. 1999, 2014; Chemyakin et al. 2014) demonstrate that multi-wavelength lidar retrieval algorithms that use measurements of aerosol extinction at both 355 and 532 nm and backscatter at 355, 532, and 1064 nm have the potential to constrain both the aerosol optical (e.g., complex index of refraction, scattering, etc.) and microphysical properties (e.g., effective radius, concentration). This advancement greatly increases the utility of the remote-sensed aerosol observations. Based on this work, the HSRL group at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)’s Langley Research Center (LaRC) ...