Publication | Open Access
Remote sensing of multi-level wind fields with high-energy airborne scanning coherent Doppler lidar
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Citations
17
References
1998
Year
EngineeringEarth ScienceAtmospheric SciencePlanetary Boundary LayerImaging RadarMeteorological MeasurementAtmospheric SensingCoherent Doppler LidarLower AtmosphereMeteorologyMarine Boundary LayerSynthetic Aperture RadarAtmospheric Lidar RemoteLidarMulti-level Wind FieldsRadar ApplicationRadarAerospace EngineeringRemote Sensing
The atmospheric lidar remote sensing groups of NOAA Environmental Technology Laboratory, NASA Marshall Space Flight Center, and Jet Propulsion Laboratory have developed and flown a scanning, 1 Joule per pulse, CO2 coherent Doppler lidar capable of mapping a three-dimensional volume of atmospheric winds and aerosol backscatter in the planetary boundary layer, free troposphere, and lower stratosphere. Applications include the study of severe and non-severe atmospheric flows, intercomparisons with other sensors, and the simulation of prospective satellite Doppler lidar wind profilers. Examples of wind measurements are given for the marine boundary layer and near the coastline of the western United States.
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