Coastal Aerosol Profiling with a Camera Lidar and Nephelometer

Author:

Sharma N. C. Parikh1,Barnes John E.2,Kaplan Trevor B.2,Clarke Antony D.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics and Earth Science, Central Connecticut State University, New Britain, Connecticut

2. NOAA/Earth System Research Laboratory/Mauna Loa Observatory, Hilo, Hawaii

3. Department of Oceanography, University of Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii

Abstract

Abstract A bistatic lidar configuration of a wide-angle camera (100°) and vertically pointed laser (532 nm) was used to profile aerosols at a coastal site. Aerosol profiles were measured on two evenings from the surface through the boundary layer. The site, on the eastern tip of the Big Island of Hawaii, is influenced by both marine boundary layer aerosols and breaking waves. Two nephelometers, located at 7 and 25 m above sea level, were compared directly with the 0.5-m-altitude resolution of the camera lidar (clidar). At 7 m, changes in aerosol were tracked quite well by the clidar. At 25 m the aerosol was fairly constant and a useful comparison could only be made with averaged values. The clidar results showed a steep gradient (decreasing with altitude) in the aerosol extinction from 7 to about 35 m. The gradient continued to 200 m at a lower rate. This demonstrated the use of the clidar in characterizing the environment for the in situ aerosol sampling. Both a measured and a NASA Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET)-derived aerosol phase function, representing similar marine conditions but from different locations, were used to convert the single-angle clidar scatter to extinction. The measured function gave the best fit to the near-surface nephelometer data. The extinction/backscatter ratio, derived by comparing the NASA Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) aerosol optical depth to the integrated clidar profile, was higher than the long-term average value from the AERONET aerosol phase function.

Publisher

American Meteorological Society

Subject

Atmospheric Science,Ocean Engineering

Reference22 articles.

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5. The Shoreline Environment Aerosol Study (SEAS): A context for marine aerosol measurements influenced by a coastal environment and long-range transport.;Clarke;J. Atmos. Oceanic Technol.,2003

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