Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles

We revised the calibration of a water vapor Raman lidar by co-located radiosoundings for a site in the high European Arctic. For this purpose, we defined robust criteria for a valid calibration. One of these criteria is the logarithm of the water vapor mixing ratio between the sonde and the lidar. W...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kulla, Birte Solveig, Ritter, Christoph
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: MDPI 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/15432/
id ftubkoeln:oai:USBKOELN.ub.uni-koeln.de:15432
record_format openpolar
spelling ftubkoeln:oai:USBKOELN.ub.uni-koeln.de:15432 2023-05-15T15:08:12+02:00 Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles Kulla, Birte Solveig Ritter, Christoph 2019 https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/15432/ eng eng MDPI Kulla, Birte Solveig orcid:0000-0001-9244-3527 and Ritter, Christoph (2019). Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles. Remote Sens., 11 (6). BASEL: MDPI. ISSN 2072-4292 ddc:no doc-type:article publishedVersion 2019 ftubkoeln 2022-11-09T07:15:06Z We revised the calibration of a water vapor Raman lidar by co-located radiosoundings for a site in the high European Arctic. For this purpose, we defined robust criteria for a valid calibration. One of these criteria is the logarithm of the water vapor mixing ratio between the sonde and the lidar. With an error analysis, we showed that for our site correlations smaller than 0.95 could be explained neither by noise in the lidar nor by wrong assumptions concerning the aerosol or Rayleigh extinction. However, highly variable correlation coefficients between sonde and consecutive lidar profiles were found, suggesting that small scale variability of the humidity was our largest source of error. Therefore, not all co-located radiosoundings are useful for lidar calibration. As we assumed these changes to be non-systematic, averaging over several independent measurements increased the calibration's quality. The calibration of the water vapor measurements from the lidar for individual profiles varied by less than +/- 5%. The seasonal median, used for calibration in this study, was stable and reliable (confidence +/- 1% for the season with most calibration profiles). Thus, the water vapor mixing ratio profiles from the Koldewey Aerosol Raman Lidar (KARL) are very accurate. They show high temporal variability up to 4 km altitude and, therefore, provide additional, independent information to the radiosonde. Article in Journal/Newspaper Arctic Cologne University: KUPS Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Cologne University: KUPS
op_collection_id ftubkoeln
language English
topic ddc:no
spellingShingle ddc:no
Kulla, Birte Solveig
Ritter, Christoph
Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles
topic_facet ddc:no
description We revised the calibration of a water vapor Raman lidar by co-located radiosoundings for a site in the high European Arctic. For this purpose, we defined robust criteria for a valid calibration. One of these criteria is the logarithm of the water vapor mixing ratio between the sonde and the lidar. With an error analysis, we showed that for our site correlations smaller than 0.95 could be explained neither by noise in the lidar nor by wrong assumptions concerning the aerosol or Rayleigh extinction. However, highly variable correlation coefficients between sonde and consecutive lidar profiles were found, suggesting that small scale variability of the humidity was our largest source of error. Therefore, not all co-located radiosoundings are useful for lidar calibration. As we assumed these changes to be non-systematic, averaging over several independent measurements increased the calibration's quality. The calibration of the water vapor measurements from the lidar for individual profiles varied by less than +/- 5%. The seasonal median, used for calibration in this study, was stable and reliable (confidence +/- 1% for the season with most calibration profiles). Thus, the water vapor mixing ratio profiles from the Koldewey Aerosol Raman Lidar (KARL) are very accurate. They show high temporal variability up to 4 km altitude and, therefore, provide additional, independent information to the radiosonde.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kulla, Birte Solveig
Ritter, Christoph
author_facet Kulla, Birte Solveig
Ritter, Christoph
author_sort Kulla, Birte Solveig
title Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles
title_short Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles
title_full Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles
title_fullStr Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles
title_full_unstemmed Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles
title_sort water vapor calibration: using a raman lidar and radiosoundings to obtain highly resolved water vapor profiles
publisher MDPI
publishDate 2019
url https://kups.ub.uni-koeln.de/15432/
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_relation Kulla, Birte Solveig orcid:0000-0001-9244-3527 and Ritter, Christoph (2019). Water Vapor Calibration: Using a Raman Lidar and Radiosoundings to Obtain Highly Resolved Water Vapor Profiles. Remote Sens., 11 (6). BASEL: MDPI. ISSN 2072-4292
_version_ 1766339609381306368