A Workshop to Develop a Large Aperture Lidar/Optical Facility for Observations of the Upper Atmosphere from km

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "A Workshop to Develop a Large Aperture Lidar/Optical Facility for Observations of the Upper Atmosphere from km"

Transcription

1 National Science Foundation Geospace Facilities Program A Workshop to Develop a Large Aperture Lidar/Optical Facility for Observations of the Upper Atmosphere from km Chester S. Gardner, Principal Investigator University of Illinois Gary R. Swenson, Co-Principal Investigator University of Illinois With Patrick Espy, Collaborator Norwegian University of Science & Technology Jeffrey Forbes, Collaborator University of Colorado David Hysell, Collaborator Cornell University Hanli Liu, Collaborator National Center for Atmospheric Research John Plane, Collaborator University of Leeds Markus Rapp, Collaborator Leibniz Institute for Atmospheric Physics Jeffrey Thayer, Collaborator University of Colorado Richard Walterscheid, Collaborator Aerospace Corporation 1

2 Project Summary We have organized a group of experts to help articulate the broad scientific rationale and develop the detailed design requirements for a major new lidar/optical facility to study the chemistry and dynamics of the Earth s atmosphere from the middle stratosphere (~30 km) to well into the thermosphere (~1000 km). The objectives are to identify the key scientific problems currently challenging the middle and upper atmospheric sciences communities and determine what new observational capabilities, especially large aperture lidar systems, could facilitate significant progress in addressing those problems. It is envisioned that the centerpiece of the new lidar/optical facility would be a ~100 m 2 collecting aperture that would consist of a 3-4 meter diameter fully steerable telescope in combination with a large array of smaller fix-pointed telescopes. In addition the facility would include important correlative instruments such as radars, imagers, spectrometers and perhaps in situ measurement capabilities using balloon and rocket probes. The specific project objectives are: 1. To determine the key scientific problems currently challenging the middle and upper atmosphere communities (with emphasis on those problems that could potentially benefit from the measurements achievable by a large aperture lidar/optical facility), 2. To determine what new observational capabilities could facilitate significant progress in addressing those problems, 3. To develop the top level design and operational requirements for the large optical telescope which would serve as the centerpiece of the new observatory, 4. To determine the design and operational requirements for the lidar systems that would utilize the large telescope, 5. To determine the key correlative instrumentation that would be essential to realize the full potential of the new observatory, and 6. To determine where the facility should be located to make the greatest contribution to science and to insure maximum operating productivity. Intellectual Merit: The scientific motivation to explore the neutral properties of the middle atmosphere and thermosphere is compelling. The outstanding challenge in terrestrial upper atmosphere research is specifying the state of the space-atmosphere interaction region [CEDAR: The New Dimension, 2011]. There is growing recognition that meteorological sources of wave energy from the lower atmosphere are responsible for producing significant variability in the upper atmosphere. Furthermore, energetic particles and fields originating from the magnetosphere regularly alter the state of the ionosphere. These influences converge through tight coupling between the ionosphere plasma and neutral thermosphere gas to produce emergent behavior in the space-atmosphere interaction region (SAIR). Unfortunately measurements of the neutral thermosphere are woefully incomplete and in critical need to advance our understanding of and ability to model the SAIR. To fully explore neutral-ion coupling in the critical region above 100 km requires measurements of the neutral atmosphere to complement radar observations of the plasma. Lidar measurements of neutral thermospheric winds, temperatures and species can enable these explorations, an objective of highest priority for the upper atmosphere science community. The development of a large aperture, lidar/optical facility would do for thermosphere studies, much as incoherent scatter radar systems have done for ionosphere studies. Broader Impacts: The proposed work has broader implications as it would provide a new opportunity for unique collaborations between the lower and upper atmosphere sciences communities, would develop state-of-the-art infrastructure for educating and training the next generation of researchers and would lead to direct observational studies and modeling of global climate change well into the thermosphere. It would also enable accurate measurements of atmospheric densities up to 1000 km that would substantially improve predictions of satellite (and debris) orbits in the important low-earth-orbit region. 2

3 1. Introduction The upper atmosphere [mesosphere, thermosphere and ionosphere] is a dynamic, complex region that interacts with its neighbors the neutral gas-dominated lower atmosphere and the plasma-dominated space environment through the transfer and transformation of energy, mass, and momentum The outstanding challenge in terrestrial upper atmosphere research is specifying the state of the space-atmosphere interaction region (SAIR) at a particular time and location; a limitation manifest by significant levels of variability that often rival the value of the mean state. This variability is driven by the nonlinear, dynamical response of the SAIR to temporally and spatially changing fluxes of energy, mass, and momentum that cross its boundaries from space and the lower atmosphere...contemporary physics-based models of the upper atmosphere lack a complete set of inputs, boundary conditions, and validation procedures to adequately account for all relevant processes. A more complete understanding of the SAIR calls for more extensive spatial and temporal observations of multiple parameters simultaneously and more complete modeling development. [from CEDAR: The New Dimension, Strategic Vision for the NSF Program on Coupling, Energetics and Dynamics of Atmospheric Regions, May 2011] We propose to organize a group of experts to help articulate the broad scientific rationale and develop the detailed design requirements for a major new lidar/optical facility to study the chemistry and dynamics of the Earth s atmosphere from the middle stratosphere (~30 km) to well into the thermosphere (~1000 km). The scientific motivation to explore the neutral properties of the middle atmosphere and thermosphere is compelling. There is growing recognition that meteorological sources of wave energy from the lower atmosphere are responsible for producing significant variability in the upper atmosphere. Furthermore, energetic particles and fields originating from the magnetosphere regularly alter the state of the ionosphere. These influences converge through the tight coupling between the ionosphere plasma and neutral thermosphere gas to produce emergent behavior in the space-atmosphere interaction region (SAIR). Unfortunately measurements of the neutral thermosphere are woefully incomplete and in critical need to advance our understanding of and ability to predict the SAIR. To fully explore neutral-ion coupling in the critical region above 100 km requires measurements of the neutral atmosphere to complement radar observations of the plasma. Lidar measurements of neutral thermospheric winds, temperatures and species can enable these explorations, an objective of highest priority for the upper atmosphere science community. The development of a large aperture, upper atmosphere lidar/optical facility would do for thermosphere studies, much as incoherent scatter radar systems have done for ionosphere studies. The development and refinement of sophisticated remote sensing technologies during the past five decades have contributed enormously to our knowledge of the atmosphere, especially the upper atmosphere above 30 km altitude. The availability and construction of major radar facilities, such as AMISR, Arecibo, EISCAT, Sondrestrom, Jicamarca, Millstone Hill and the MU Radar, have permitted researchers to study directly the ionized atmosphere with unprecedented accuracy and resolution while enabling inferences of neutral gas properties and dynamics. At the time these facilities were commissioned, each represented a major step forward in observational capabilities. Today these radars continue to play central roles in many ionospheric studies. Lidar technology has enjoyed a similar renaissance since the invention of the laser 50 years ago. The first lidars were built in the 1930s and 1940s using mechanically modulated searchlights. Today, modern laser-based systems are used to probe composition and structure throughout the atmosphere from the troposphere into the lower thermosphere. The last two decades has been a period of substantial growth in lidar capabilities and applications, principally because of advances in critical areas of laser technology. Perhaps the most important of these has been the development of high-power, ultra-stable narrowband lasers, which are now being used in Doppler lidars for middle and upper atmosphere applications. Furthermore, robust tunable fiber lasers are also being used in laser guide star applications for ground-based astronomical imaging ( ) and for sensing helium in the Earth s thermosphere 3

4 [Carlson et al., 2009]. Today space-borne systems such as IceSat (Ice, Cloud and Land Elevation Satellite, ) and CALIPSO (Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite, are routinely providing global information on clouds and aerosols in the troposphere and stratosphere. While the recent advances in lidar technology have been impressive, the accuracy, resolution, sensitivity and range of many systems are still limited by signal levels. Experiments conducted during the past fifteen years using the 3-meter class telescopes at the Starfire Optical Range, NM and Haleakala, Maui (Maui/MALT Program) demonstrated clearly the substantial scientific advantages of employing large steerable lidar telescopes in combination with correlative radars, passive optical instruments and rocket probes to study the middle and upper atmosphere. This project builds upon that prior work and recent laser technology advances by assembling a group of experts to articulate the scientific rationale and develop the design requirements for a major new facility to study the chemistry and dynamics of the Earth s atmosphere from the middle stratosphere (~30 km) to well into the thermosphere using molecular and resonance fluorescence scattering to ~200 km and He resonance fluorescence scattering from ~200 to ~1000 km. This proposed capability would be a transformative step in understanding how a planetary atmosphere interacts with space. As will be shown in this proposal, there are no technology barriers to achieving this goal. The centerpiece of the observatory would be a 10-meter class telescope that would serve as the receiving system for several very large lidar systems. By 10-meter class we mean a telescope with an effective aperture area comparable to a 10 meter diameter mirror (~100 m 2 ). It is envisioned that the facility would consist of a large fully steerable telescope (3-4 meters in diameter) in combination with a large array of smaller fix-pointed telescopes (e.g. 10x10 array of 1 meter telescopes) yielding a total collecting area of approximately 100 square meters. The observatory would also include an appropriate complement of other important instruments such as radars, imagers, spectrometers and perhaps in situ measurement capabilities using balloon and rocket probes. The large telescope collecting area in combination with modern high-power laser systems, would permit lidar measurements of winds, density, temperature and chemical composition with a sensitivity and resolution approximately 1000 times better than those which can be achieved with the most powerful systems in operation today. Depending on the application, it would be possible to develop instruments with power-aperture products of more than 10 4 Wm 2 and permit researchers to study atmospheric processes with unprecedented accuracy and resolution. Such capabilities would enable the measurement of temperatures and winds up to 200 km altitude utilizing Rayleigh and metal lidar techniques and between about 200 and 1000 km utilizing a He resonance fluorescence lidar. These measurements would fill a critical knowledge gap in the thermosphere and enhance our understanding of electrodynamic effects that require knowledge of neutral winds and density. In addition, by employing Na, Fe and K metal lidar techniques, it would be possible to directly measure key turbulence processes and parameters like heat and constituent transport, eddy diffusivity and the turbulent Prandtl numbers below the turbopause (~110 km). Because the telescope would be designed specifically for lidar applications and be steerable, active experiments involving laser modification and chemical releases from satellites and rockets would open entirely new research areas. 2. Potential Measurement Capabilities of a 10-Meter Class Lidar Observatory Although neutral thermospheric temperatures and winds have been routinely sampled in large spatial volumes from nightglow emissions at 630 nm, thermospheric structure including disturbances associated with waves, tides, and TIDs are only partially understood. Remote sensing measurements from limb viewing spacecraft have provided thermospheric temperature data, but temporally and spatially resolved measurements at sufficient resolution to study waves and tides are largely nonexistent. Fortunately, lidars with sufficiently large power-aperture products can fill this data gap. Since the invention of the laser in 1961, lidar systems have been developed to measure a wide variety of atmospheric constituents and parameters. To illustrate 4

5 the greatly enhanced measurement capabilities that can be achieved with a very large optical observatory, we consider Rayleigh and metal lidar measurements of temperature in the lower thermosphere up to 200 km altitude and Doppler resonance fluorescence measurements of metastable He and temperatures between 200 and 1000 km. 2.1 Rayleigh Lidar Elterman [1951; 1952; 1953] made the very first Rayleigh lidar measurements of stratospheric temperature and aerosol profiles sixty years ago using a bi-static configuration consisting of a zenith pointed searchlight and an off-axis vertically scanning telescope. For the more common mono-static configuration, the laser and receiving telescope are co-located. Range resolution is achieved by transmitting a pulsed laser beam and range gating the backscattered signal collected by the receiving telescope. The time of flight of the laser pulse corresponds to range. Under appropriate conditions, the rms temperature error (!T RMS ) of a Rayleigh lidar is given by [Gardner, 2004]!T RMS = T (z) SNR. (1) T(z) is the temperature at altitude z and the signal-to-noise power ratio (SNR) is SNR = N R 2 (z) N R (z) + N B! N R (z), (2) where N R (z) is the Rayleigh signal count at altitude z and N B is the background noise count. When the laser beam and telescope are pointed vertically, the classic lidar equation for the Rayleigh signal count is given by N R (z) = P Laser! hc / " #(z)$!z A Tele R 4% (z " z Tele ) & T 2 2 Tele Atmos (3) P Laser! where is the average power of the laser beam (W), is the integration period (s), hc /! = "19 J c = m / s is the photon energy,, is Planck s constant, is the velocity of light, is the optical wavelength of the laser beam (frequency-doubled Nd:YAG laser), is the aperture area of the telescope (m 2 ), z Tele is the telescope alititude, including the quantum efficiency of the detector and the atmosphere. The Rayleigh scattering probability is! / hc = / J h = !34 J / s! = "7 m! Tele 2 T Atmos A Tele is the optical efficiency of the telescope is the 2-way optical transmittance of P(z) #z!(z)" R #z = $31 T (z) % = P(z) $6 T (z) #z (4)!(z) where is the atmospheric density (m -3 ), is the Rayleigh backscatter cross-section (m 2 ),!z is the vertical extent (resolution) of the observed scattering volume (m), P(z) is the atmospheric pressure (mb) and T (z)! R is the atmospheric temperature (K). 5

6 We now evaluate the measurement capabilities of one potential implementation of a mono-static Rayleigh lidar using the existing Gemini South 8 meter astronomical telescope at Cerro Pachon, Chile and a commercially available Nd:YAG laser. The key parameters of this facility are summarized in Table 1. The Coherent Mamba Green laser (Table 1) is diode laser pumped with a pulse rate of 10 kpps. To operate as a Rayleigh lidar to 200 km, the pulse rate must be reduced to 750 pps. This can be done without sacrificing power, by splitting the beam and using multiple fields-of-view. In Table 2 we summarize the SNR and measurement errors for a mono-static lidar operating during nighttime (when N B! N R (z) ) that employs the Gemini South 8 meter telescope and a laser power of pps. Scientifically useful atmospheric density and temperature measurements (better than ~10% accuracy) could be made to an altitude of 200 km. Altitude z Parameter Table 1. Cerro Pachon Observatory Cerro Pachon, Chile Location S 30 o 14.5, W 70 o 44.1 Altitude ( z Tele ) 2.7 km Telescope ( A Tele ) Gemini South 8 m (50 m 2 ) 1 Optical Bandwidth (!" ) 0.2 nm Optical Efficiency (! Tele ) Way Atmospheric Transmission (T Atmos ) 0.5 Laser Power ( P Laser ) kpps Wavelength (! ) Beam Divergence (! Laser ) 532 nm 0.25 mrad Power-Aperture Product ( P Laser A Tele ) 16,335 Wm 2 1 Also available at Cerro Pachon, SOR 4 m (12.5 m 2 ) telescope 2 Coherent Mamba Green, High-Power, Q-Switched, Multimode Green Laser Table 2. Gemini South 8-Meter Telescope - Cerro Pachon, Chile Δz = 5 km, Δλ=0.1 nm, P Laser = pps, θ Laser =125 µrad Model Model SNR=N 2 R /(N R +N B ) Δρ RMS /ρ and ΔT RMS Temperature Pressure T(z) 1 P(z) 1 τ=1 min τ=1 hr τ=1 min τ=1 hr 200 km 855 K mb 76 11% 98 K 190 km 825 K mb % 63K 180 km 790 K mb % 39 K 170 km 748 K mb % 23 K 160 km 696 K mb % 99 K 1.8% 13 K 150 km 634 K mb % 53 K 1.1% 6.8 K 140 km 560 K mb % 26 K 0.6% 3.4 K 130 km 469 K mb % 12 K 0.3% 1.5 K 120 km 360 K mb % 4.6 K 0.2% 0.6 K 110 km 240 K mb % 1.3 K 0.07% 0.2 K 100 km 195 K mb % 0.4 K 0.03% 0.05 K 1 U.S. Standard Atmosphere, Metal Lidars Meteoric ablation is the source of metal atom layers in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere (MLT) above about 75 km altitude. Their existence was discovered by analyzing the spectra of atmospheric nightglow emissions [e.g. Slipher, 1929] and later confirmed by resonance fluorescence lidar measurements [e.g., Bowman et al., 1969]. During the past four 6

7 decades lidar techniques have been developed to measure mesospheric Na, Fe, K, Ca, Ca+, and Li. Nowadays narrowband Fe, Na, and K lidars are used routinely to measure temperature and wind profiles in these metal layers, enabling detailed studies of the thermal structure, dynamics, and chemistry of the mesopause region (see summary by Chu and Papen [2005]). The classic lidar equation for the resonance fluorescence signal count N S is similar to that for Rayleigh lidars N S (z) = P Laser! hc / " # S(z)$ eff (")!z A Tele 4% (z " z Tele ) 2 & TeleT Atmos 2, (5) where! S (z) is the species concentration and! eff (") is the effective resonance fluorescence backscatter cross section of the species. Under appropriate conditions, the rms temperature and radial wind errors (!T RMS!and!!V RMS ) for 3-frequency Doppler metal lidars are given by [Gardner, 2004]!T RMS = 1.8T(z) SNR " 360K SNR!V RMS = 1.5 k B T(z) / m S SNR SNR = N S 2 (z) N S (z) + N B " N S (z) " 250m / s SNR, (6) where T~200 K, k B = 1.38x10!23 J / K is Boltzmann s constant and m S is the atomic mass of the species. The larger the power-aperture product of the lidar ( P Laser A Tele ), the larger the signal level N S and SNR and the smaller the measurement errors. The advantages of employing large aperture telescopes to observe the metal layers are best illustrated by the data plotted in Figures 1 and 2. In Figure 1 are the temperature and Na density profiles through a persistent chemi-luminescent meteor trail that were measured during the 1998 Leonids meteor storm at the Starfire Optical Range, NM with a Na Doppler lidar (1.5 W) coupled to a 3.5 meter diameter astronomical telescope (~10 m 2 ) [Chu et al., 2001]. Because of the large power aperture product ( P Laser A Tele = 14.4!Wm 2 ) and high Na densities within the meteor trail (up to 100 times higher than the background Na layer), it was possible to make accurate temperature and density measurements at high spatial and temporal resolutions (24 m and 15 s). The authors attributed the elevated temperatures at the edges of the Na-rich meteor trail to chemical heating. Plotted in Figure 2 is the density of the background Na layer measured with an even larger broadband lidar [Pfrommer et al., 2009]. The laser power was 5 W and the telescope was a 6 meter diameter mercury mirror so that P Laser A Tele = 141!Wm 2. The data are plotted at a resolution of 14.4 m and 60 ms. At this high resolution it is possible to observe Kelvin-Helmholtz instabilities and turbulence associated with breaking gravity waves. As these examples illustrate, the extremely large signal levels achievable with a 10-meter class telescope would permit Rayleigh, Na and Fe lidar measurements between 75 and 105 km altitude at resolutions and accuracies sufficient to study turbulence characteristics and directly measure the associated eddy diffusivities as well as the eddy heat and constituent transport [Gardner and Liu, 2010]. 7

8 300 09:30:43 UT 17 NOV Temperature (K) Na Density (cm -3 ) Altitude (km) Figure 1. Na density (dotted line, scale on the right) and temperature (solid line, scale on the left) profiles for the lower Diamond Ring meteor ablation trail observed at The Starfire Optical Range, NM (telescope diameter = 3.5 m) at 09:30:43 UT on 17 Nov The background temperature profile is plotted as the dashed line. The resolution is 24 m and 15 s. [from Chu et al., 2001]. Figure 2. Na density measured with the University of British Columbia Larger Zenith Telescope (diameter = 6 m) broadband Na lidar. The vertical resolution is 14.4 m and the temporal resolution is 60 ms [from Pfrommer et al., 2009]. Although the metal layers are primarily confined to the mesopause region between 75 and 105 km where they exhibit their highest densities, it is now known that tenuous layers of Na, Fe and K extend as high as 150 km [e.g. Hoffner and Friedman, 2004; Chu et al., 2011]. Recently Chu et al. [2011] reported observations of gravity wave signatures in Fe density and temperature profiles measured in the thermosphere up to 155 km at McMurdo, Antarctica with a modest Fe Boltzmann temperature lidar ( P Laser A Tele = 0.5!Wm 2 ) (see Figure 3). This lidar consists of two independent channels probing the 372 and 374 nm absorption lines of neutral Fe atoms. Temperatures are inferred from the ratio of the signals in the two channels. While the metal densities at thermospheric heights are typically only a few tens to a few hundred atoms per cm 3, 8

9 both temperature and wind profiles could be derived from lidar measurements made with a sufficiently large power aperture product instrument. In fact the collecting area of the large aperture, lidar/optical facility proposed here would be almost 800 times larger than the aperture used to obtain the McMurdo measurements illustrated in Figure 3. Utilizing such a large aperture would reduce the temperature errors in Figure 3 by a factor of 28. If, in addition to the telescope, the Boltzmann lidar was replaced by a 3-frequency Doppler Fe lidar of the same power, then the temperature errors in Figure 3 would be reduced by a factor of 50, yielding accuracies of ~8 K and ~5 m/s at altitudes as high as 150 km. Altitude (km) (b) McMurdo 28 May 14.8 UT Fe Density (cm 3 ) 372 nm Fe 374 nm Fe Figure 3. a) Fe density contour (cm -3 ) b) Fe density profiles at 372 and 374 nm and c) temperature (K) profile measured with an Fe Boltzmann lidar (telescope diameter = 0.4 m) at McMurdo, Antarctica on 28 May The vertical resolution is 2 km and the temporal resolution is 15 min [from Chu et al., 2011]. 2.3 He Lidar Almost fifteen years ago, it was proposed by Gerrard et al. (1997) that a naturally occurring metastable state of helium, He(2 3 S), could act as an efficient scatterer in the Earth s thermosphere at altitudes above approximately 200 km. With a powerful enough laser source operating at 1083 nm and a large receiving telescope, a He resonance fluorescence lidar system could be developed to probe the winds and temperatures associated with waves, tides and TIDs between 200 and 1000 km altitude, something that is of great interest to scientists studying the electrodynamics and plasma-neutral coupling of the Earth s ionosphere-thermosphere system. A bistatic He resonance fluorescence lidar is currently under development at the University of Illinois (G. R. Swenson s group) for the purpose of measuring for the first time, thermosphere temperature and wind profiles above 200 km. The Illinois group has constructed 9

10 and demonstrated the key element of the lidar, a diode-seeded, fiber amplified (10 W CW), narrow band (<1 MHz linewidth) laser, which is capable of being tuned to measure the Doppler broadened distribution of thermospheric He atoms in the (2 3 S) metastable state, using resonant scattering at 1083 nm [Carlson et al., 2009]. The transmitter configuration consists of a master oscillator diode laser followed by a fiber power amplifier. A distributed Bragg reflector (DBR) grating laser diode operating at 1083 nm was developed at the University of Illinois (J. J. Coleman s group) and is used for the master oscillator. The diode laser is frequency locked to the He(2 3 S) transition using an absorption cell in which the He metastable state is generated with an RF discharge. Figure 4 is a photograph of the laser in the laboratory. Figure 4. Photograph of the Ytterbium-doped fiber laser transmitter developed at the University of Illinois for the He(2 3 S) resonance fluorescence lidar [Carlson et al., 2009]. The He(2 3 S) lidar system is currently in test at the Urbana Atmospheric Observatory (UAO, 0.6 m 2 ). The system will be deployed at Magdalena Ridge Observatory (MRO, 4.5 m 2 ) near Socorro NM, in December 2011 for demonstration of first light. The expected SNR for the MRO installation is plotted in Figure 5. These calculations were made by assuming a twilight He(2 3 S) population, a telescope diameter of 2.4 meters ( A Tele =4.5 m 2 ) and a laser power of 10 W with the lidar operating in the bi-static configuration. The detector is an Andor camera equipped with a deep depleted, high efficiency CCD array, cooled to -65C with a 3% QE. The combined optical efficiency of the transmitting and receiving optics is assumed to be 50%, the 1-way atmospheric transmittance is 50%, altitude resolution is 50 km and the integration period is 5 minutes. Under appropriate conditions, the rms temperature error (!T RMS ) for a 3-frequency Doppler He lidar is given by [Gardner, 2004]!T RMS = 1.8T(z) SNR. (7) At 500 km where T~1000 K and the SNR reaches a maximum value of about 50 for the Magdalena Ridge Observatory installation (P Laser A Tele = 45 Wm 2 ), the rms temperature error is expected be about 255 K. However, employing the Gemini South 8 meter telescope at Cerro 10

11 Pachon, Chile (A Tele =50 m 2 ) and increasing the laser power to 100 W would raise the poweraperture product to 5000 Wm 2 and increase the SNR given in Figure 5 by a factor of 111. Such a capability would directly enable high resolution sensing of temperature and wind profiles in the middle and upper thermosphere. For example, the SNR at 500 km would increase to 5,600 and temperature error would decrease to just 24 K. At 750 km the SNR would be ~2,500 and the temperature error would be 36 K. Even at 1000 km, the SNR would be a respectable 900 and the rms temperature error about 60 K. Figure 5. Expected SNR for the He(2 3 S) lidar at the Magdalena Ridge Observatory near Socorro, NM (telescope diameter = 2.4 m) where the power-aperture product is 45 Wm 2. These Rayleigh, metal and He lidar examples clearly illustrate the extraordinary measurement capabilities that could be achieved by using today s laser technology in combination with a large optical telescope of a size comparable to existing astronomical facilities. Significantly, there are no technology barriers that would prevent making temperature and wind measurements of the neutral atmosphere well into the thermosphere to 1000 km. This capability would open an entirely new region of the Earth s atmosphere to detailed studies of dynamics, chemistry and atmospheric modeling. 3. Project Objectives We propose to organize a group of experts to help articulate the broad scientific rationale and develop the detailed design requirements for a major new lidar/optical facility to study the chemistry and dynamics of the Earth s atmosphere from the middle stratosphere (~30 km) to well into the thermosphere (~1000 km). The objectives are to identify the key scientific problems currently challenging the middle and upper atmospheric sciences communities and determine what new observational capabilities, especially large aperture lidar systems, could facilitate significant progress in addressing those problems. It is envisioned that the centerpiece of the new lidar/optical facility would be a ~100 m 2 collecting aperture that would consist of a 3-4 meter diameter fully steerable telescope in combination with a large array of smaller fix-pointed telescopes. In addition the facility would include important correlative instruments such as radars, imagers, spectrometers and perhaps in situ measurement capabilities using balloon and rocket probes. The specific objectives are: 1. To determine the key scientific problems currently challenging the middle and upper atmosphere communities (with emphasis on those problems that could potentially benefit from the measurements achievable by a large aperture lidar/optical facility), 2. To determine what new observational capabilities could facilitate significant progress in addressing those problems, 11

12 3. To develop the top level design and operational requirements for the large optical telescope that would serve as the centerpiece of the new observatory, 4. To determine the design and operational requirements for the lidar systems that would utilize the large optical telescope, 5. To determine the key correlative instrumentation that would be essential to realize the full potential of the new observatory, and 6. To determine where the facility should be located to make the greatest contribution to science and to insure maximum operating productivity. 4. Statement of Work A 3-day Large Aperture, Upper Atmosphere Lidar/Optical Facility Workshop would be held in Chicago, IL during the spring 2012 to address all six of the objectives identified in Section 3. The Workshop would include both invited and contributed papers that address each objective. While the Workshop would be open to the whole atmospheric sciences community, attendance will be limited to ~30 participants. It will be important for certain key experts to participate. The PI and Co-PI, working in collaboration with the Workshop Steering Committee (see below), NSF program managers and the CEDAR Science Steering Committee, would identify key contributors who would be invited to participate and offered travel support to attend. It is envisioned that these invited contributors would broadly represent the atmospheric chemistry, dynamics, modeling and instrumentation communities. A Workshop Steering Committee, co-chaired by PI Gardner and Co-PI Swenson and including other key scientists, would be formed and charged with the responsibility of organizing the scientific program of the Workshop and reporting its results. After the Workshop, the Steering Committee would prepare a detailed written report for NSF that thoroughly addresses all six of the project objectives. The Workshop Steering Committee members (all of whom have confirmed their willingness to serve) include: Chester Gardner (Co-chair), University of Illinois Gary Swenson (Co-chair), University of Illinois Patrick Espy, Norwegian University of Science & Technology o Senior member of the atmospheric physics community, international leader on airglow studies of the chemistry and dynamics of the mesopause region Jeffrey Forbes, University of Colorado o Senior member of the atmospheric dynamics community, world s leading expert on atmospheric tidal modeling and on tidal interactions with the neutral and ionized atmospheres David Hysell, Cornell University o Senior member of the electro-dynamics community, international leader in ionospheric electrodynamics and plasma instability studies Hanli Liu, National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) o Senior member of the upper atmosphere modeling community, leads the thermosphere/ionosphere extension of the Whole Atmosphere Community Climate Model (WACCM) John Plane, University of Leeds o Senior member of the atmospheric chemistry community, acknowledged world leader in global modeling of the meteoric metal layers Markus Rapp, Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics o Senior member of the atmospheric physics community, expert on radar, lidar and sounding rocket probing of the upper atmosphere Jeffery Thayer, University of Colorado o Senior member of the CEDAR lidar community, immediate past chair of the CEDAR Science Steering Committee, led the preparation of the strategic plan CEDAR: The New Dimension published in May

13 Richard Walterscheid, The Aerospace Corporation o Senior member of the atmospheric dynamics community, developed key theories describing the impact of waves on the structure and composition of the middle and upper atmospheres This project benefits from and builds upon the considerable prior work of the CEDAR Science Steering Committee, who just released the 2011 CEDAR Stategic Plan (CEDAR The New Dimension, Strategic Vision for the NSF Program on Coupling, Energetics and Dynamics of Atmospheric Regions, May 2011), the CEDAR lidar community who prepared an extensive review of lidar accomplishments (CEDAR Lidar Beyond Phase III: Accomplishments, Requirement and Goals, March 2004) and an earlier report written by members of the research community on the scientific merits of large lidar systems (A Proposal for the Large Atmospheric Observatory, Draft Report, 16 October 1991). The specific project activities are: 1. To form a Workshop Steering Committee, co-chared by the PI and Co-PI, that includes several other key scientists, for the purpose of organizing the Large Aperture, Upper Atmosphere Lidar/Optical Facility Workshop and reporting its results, 2. To organize and conduct the 3-day Workshop in Chicago, IL during spring 2012 and 3. To prepare a detailed written report for NSF that summarizes the outcomes of the Workshop and addresses all six project objectives identified in Section Project Management and Timeline This project is a collaborative effort involving researchers from the University of Illinois, Cornell University, National Center for Atmospheric Research, University of Leeds, Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics, University of Colorado and The Aerospace Corporation. Professor Chester S. Gardner would serve as Principal Investigator and Professor Gary R. Swenson would serve as Co-Principal Investigator. In addition, Professors Jeffrey Forbes (U Colorado), Patrick Espy (Norwegian UST), David Hysell (Cornell), John Plane (U Leeds), Markus Rapp (Leibniz IAP), Jeffrey Thayer (U Colorado) and Dr. Richard Walterscheid (Aerospace Corp) would be key Collaborators. PI Gardner would be responsible for overall project management and scientific guidance. He has considerable experience in successfully managing large complex scientific projects involving multiple investigators from different institutions (e.g. ALOHA-90, ALOHA-93, ANLC-93, LEONIDS-98, Maui/MALT). Co-PI Swenson is also an accomplished, highly respected scientist. He led the development of the novel 1083 nm fiber laser that is the key component of the He resonance fluorescence lidar. PI Gardner and Co-PI Swenson would be responsible for handling the local arrangements for the Workshop and organizing its scientific program. They would cochair the Workshop Steering Committee and ultimately would be responsible for insuring that the project objectives are achieved and the final written report is submitted to NSF and disseminated to the broader scientific community. Funds are requested to support the local costs of the Workshop (There would be no attendance fees.), which would be held at the University Club of Chicago, 76 East Monroe Street, Chicago, IL. Travel funds are requested to enable the Steering Committee Members and other key invited speakers to attend the Workshop and to enable the Steering Committee Members to interact while writing the final report following the Workshop. Eighteen months of effort would be required to fully achieve the project goals. Funds are requested to support the project beginning 1 November Nov Mar 2012: Assemble the Workshop Steering Committee, Organize and disseminate background materials to Workshop Steering Committee, Organize the Workshop scientific program, 13

14 Invite key speakers and Finalize the local arrangements for the Workshop. 1 Apr - 30 Jun 2012: Conduct the Workshop Process travel reimbursements Disseminate Workshop materials to Steering Committee Members 1 Jul Dec 2012: Prepare first draft of Workshop report with assistance of Workshop Steering Committee and other key scientists 1 Jan Feb 2013: Disseminate draft report to key scientists for comment Revise draft report and disseminate revision to NSF for comment 1 Mar Apr 2013: Prepare final draft of Workshop report Submit final report to NSF and disseminate to the CEDAR science community 6. Education Plan The primary product of this project is a detailed report in which the key middle and upper atmosphere scientific problems are described and the potential for addressing those problems with the major instruments that would be associated with a large aperture, upper atmosphere lidar/optical facility are discussed. The report would serve current and future researchers and students by helping guide their research programs and instrument development. The PI and Co- PI will disseminate this report to the broader CEDAR and NSF communities to insure that scientists and students are aware of the potential contributions that optical remote sensing can make to middle and upper atmosphere science. Most of the Collaborators (PI, Co-PI and Workshop Steering Committee Members) as well as most of the anticipated Workshop participants have faculty appointments at research universities. The synergy provided by this project would enhance on going research and education in their laboratories and contribute to their classroom teaching, especially at the graduate level in courses on optical remote sensing, aeronomy, atmospheric dynamics and atmospheric chemistry. 7. Data Management Plan The primary product of this project is a detailed report in which the key middle and upper atmosphere scientific problems are described and the potential for addressing those problems with the major instruments that would be associated with a large aperture, upper atmosphere lidar/optical facility are discussed. The final report will be submitted to the NSF Geospace Facilities Program director for dissemination via the normal NSF channels, including the NSF website. Unrestricted access to the report will also be provided via the CEDARWiki and database maintained by the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, CO. ( ) 8. Intellectual Merit and Broader Impacts The scientific motivation to explore the neutral properties of the middle atmosphere and thermosphere is compelling. The outstanding challenge in terrestrial upper atmosphere research is specifying the state of the space-atmosphere interaction region [CEDAR: The New Dimension, 2011]. There is growing recognition that meteorological sources of wave energy from the lower atmosphere are responsible for producing significant variability in the upper atmosphere. Furthermore, energetic particles and fields originating from the magnetosphere regularly alter the state of the ionosphere. These influences converge through tight coupling between the ionosphere plasma and neutral thermosphere gas to produce emergent behavior in the spaceatmosphere interaction region (SAIR). Unfortunately measurements of the neutral thermosphere are woefully incomplete and in critical need to advance our understanding of and ability to model 14

15 the SAIR. To fully explore neutral-ion coupling in the critical region above 100 km requires measurements of the neutral atmosphere to complement radar observations of the plasma. Lidar measurements of neutral thermospheric winds, temperatures and species can enable these explorations, an objective of highest priority for the upper atmosphere science community. The development of a large aperture, lidar/optical facility would do for thermosphere studies, much as incoherent scatter radar systems have done for ionosphere studies. The proposed work has broader implications as it would provide a new opportunity for unique collaborations between the lower and upper atmosphere sciences communities, would develop state-of-the-art infrastructure for educating and training the next generation of researchers and would lead to direct observational studies and modeling of global climate change well into the thermosphere. It would also enable accurate measurements of atmospheric densities up to 1000 km that would substantially improve predictions of satellite (and debris) orbits in the important low-earth-orbit region. 9. References Bowman, M. R., A. J. Gibson, and M. C. W. Sandford, Atmospheric sodium measured by a tuned laser radar, Nature, 221, (1969) Carlson, C. G., P. D. Dragic, R. K. Price, J. J. Coleman and G. R. Swenson, A narrow linewidth Yb fiber-amplified-based upper atmospheric Doppler temperature lidar, IEEE J. on Sel. Topics in Quantum Elec., 15(2), (2009) Chu, X., Z. Yu, C. S. Gardner, C. Chen, and W. Fong, Lidar observations of neutral Fe layers and fast gravity waves in the thermosphere ( km) at McMurdo (77.8 o S, o E), Antarctica, submitted to Geophys. Res. Letts., 22 Sep (2011) Chu, X., and G. Papen, Resonance fluorescence lidar for measurements of the middle and upper atmosphere, in Laser Remote Sensing, edited by T. Fujii and T. Fukuchi, CRC Press, ISBN: , page (2005) Chu, X., A. Liu, G. C. Papen, C. S. Gardner, M. C. Kelley, J. Drummond, and R. Fugate, Lidar observations of elevated temperatures in bright chemiluminescent meteor trails during the 1998 Leonid shower, Geophys. Res. Letts., 27(13), (2000) Elterman, L. B., The measurement of the stratospheric density distribution with the search light technique, Journal of Geophysical Research, 56, (1951) Elterman, L. B., A series of stratospheric temperature profiles obtained with the search light technique, Journal of Geophysical Research, 58, (1953) Elterman, L. B., Seasonal trends of temperature, density and pressure to 67.5 km obtained with the search light probing technique, Journal of Geophysical Research, 59, (1954) Gardner, C. S., Performance capabilities of middle-atmosphere lidars: comparison of Na, Fe, K, Ca, Ca +, and Rayleigh systems, Applied Optics, 43, (2004) Gardner, C. S., and A. Z. Liu, Wave-induced transport of atmospheric constituents and its effect on the mesospheric Na layer, Journal of Geophysical Research, 115, D20302, doi: /2010jd (2010) Gerrard, A. J., T. J. Kane, D. D. Meisel, J. P. Thayer and R. B. Kerr, Investigation of a resonance lidar for measurement of thermospheric metastable helium, J. Atmos. Solar-Terr. Phys., 59(16), (1997) Hoffner, J. and J. S. Friedman, The mesospheric metal layer topside: Examples of simultaneous metal observations, J. Atmos. Solar-Terr. Phys., 67, (2005) 15

16 Slipher, V. M., Emission in the spectrum of light in the night sky, Publ. Astron. Soc. Pac., 41, (1929) Thayer, J. P., editor, CEDAR: The New Dimension, Strategic Vision for the NSF Program on Coupling, Energetics and Dynamics of Atmospheric Regions, 1-34 (2011) 16

Remote Sensing the Upper Atmosphere with Lidar from Space Background: Ground based lidar studies of the upper atmosphere

Remote Sensing the Upper Atmosphere with Lidar from Space Background: Ground based lidar studies of the upper atmosphere RemoteSensingtheUpperAtmospherewithLidarfromSpace bygaryswenson ElectricalandComputerEngineering,UniversityofIllinois,Champaign,Urbana,IL Lidar(LIght Detection And Ranging) remote sensing of the atmosphere

More information

Lecture 16. Temperature Lidar (5) Resonance Doppler Techniques

Lecture 16. Temperature Lidar (5) Resonance Doppler Techniques LIDAR REMOTE SENSING PROF. XINZHAO CHU CU-BOULDER, SPRING 06 Lecture 6. Temperature Lidar (5) Resonance Doppler Techniques q Resonance Fluorescence Na Doppler Lidar Ø Na Structure and Spectroscopy Ø Scanning

More information

Lecture 17. Temperature Lidar (6) Integration Technique

Lecture 17. Temperature Lidar (6) Integration Technique Lecture 17. Temperature Lidar (6) Integration Technique Doppler effects in absorption/backscatter coefficient Integration technique for temperature Searchlight integration lidar Rayleigh integration temperature

More information

Study Participants: T.E. Sarris, E.R. Talaat, A. Papayannis, P. Dietrich, M. Daly, X. Chu, J. Penson, A. Vouldis, V. Antakis, G.

Study Participants: T.E. Sarris, E.R. Talaat, A. Papayannis, P. Dietrich, M. Daly, X. Chu, J. Penson, A. Vouldis, V. Antakis, G. GLEME: GLOBAL LIDAR EXPLORATION OF THE MESOSPHERE Project Technical Officer: E. Armandillo Study Participants: T.E. Sarris, E.R. Talaat, A. Papayannis, P. Dietrich, M. Daly, X. Chu, J. Penson, A. Vouldis,

More information

Lecture 10. Lidar Classification and Envelope Estimation

Lecture 10. Lidar Classification and Envelope Estimation Lecture 10. Lidar Classification and Envelope Estimation Various Lidar Classifications Lidar Classification by Topics Temperature lidar technologies Wind lidar technologies Constituent lidar technologies

More information

Observations of Overturning in the Upper Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere

Observations of Overturning in the Upper Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere Department of Physical Sciences - Daytona Beach College of Arts & Sciences 1-22-2004 Observations of Overturning in the Upper Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere M. F. Larsen Clemson University Alan Z. Liu

More information

On atmospheric lidar performance comparison: from power aperture product to power aperture mixing ratio scattering cross-section product

On atmospheric lidar performance comparison: from power aperture product to power aperture mixing ratio scattering cross-section product Journal of Modern Optics Vol. 52, No. 18, 15 December 2005, 2723 2729 On atmospheric lidar performance comparison: from power aperture product to power aperture mixing ratio scattering cross-section product

More information

Overturning instability in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere: analysis of instability conditions in lidar data

Overturning instability in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere: analysis of instability conditions in lidar data Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University From the SelectedWorks of Alan Z Liu 2009 Overturning instability in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere: analysis of instability conditions in lidar data Lucas Hurd,

More information

Lecture 28. Aerosol Lidar (4) HSRL for Aerosol Measurements

Lecture 28. Aerosol Lidar (4) HSRL for Aerosol Measurements Lecture 28. Aerosol Lidar (4) HSRL for Aerosol Measurements Review of single- and multi-channel aerosol lidars Principle of High Spectral Resolution Lidar (HSRL) HSRL instrumentation University of Wisconsin

More information

Lecture 21. Constituent Lidar (3)

Lecture 21. Constituent Lidar (3) Lecture 21. Constituent Lidar (3) Motivations to study atmosphere constituents Lidar detection of atmospheric constituents (spectroscopic signatures to distinguish species) Metal atoms by resonance fluorescence

More information

Lecture 12. Temperature Lidar (2) Resonance Fluorescence Doppler Lidar

Lecture 12. Temperature Lidar (2) Resonance Fluorescence Doppler Lidar LIDAR REMOTE SENSING PROF. XINZHAO CHU CU-BOULDER, FALL 04 Lecture. Temperature Lidar () Resonance Fluorescence Doppler Lidar Resonance Fluorescence Na Doppler Lidar Na Structure and Spectroscopy Scanning

More information

Lecture 11. Classification of Lidar by Topics

Lecture 11. Classification of Lidar by Topics Lecture 11. Classification of Lidar by Topics Effective cross section for resonance fluorescence Various lidar classifications What are topical lidars and why? Temperature techniques Wind techniques Aerosol

More information

Lecture 18. Temperature Lidar (7) Rayleigh Doppler Technique

Lecture 18. Temperature Lidar (7) Rayleigh Doppler Technique Lecture 18. Temperature Lidar (7) Rayleigh Doppler Technique Review of integration technique Resonance fluorescence Doppler technique vs. Rayleigh Doppler technique Rayleigh Doppler lidar High-spectral-resolution

More information

Waves and Turbulence Dynamics above the Andes

Waves and Turbulence Dynamics above the Andes Waves and Turbulence Dynamics above the Andes Alan Liu Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Daytona Beach, Florida, USA F. Vargas, G. Swenson, A. Mangognia (UIUC) W. Huang, J. Smith, X. Chu (CU Boulder)

More information

Lecture 26. Wind Lidar (4) Direct Detection Doppler Lidar

Lecture 26. Wind Lidar (4) Direct Detection Doppler Lidar Lecture 26. Wind Lidar (4) Direct Detection Doppler Lidar Considerations (Accuracy and Precision) for DDL Na-DEMOF DDL -- Multi-frequency edge-filter DDL New development of DDL -- DDL based on Fizeau etalon

More information

Alan Z. Liu Embry Riddle Aeronautical University - Daytona Beach, Chester S. Gardner

Alan Z. Liu Embry Riddle Aeronautical University - Daytona Beach, Chester S. Gardner Department of Physical Sciences - Daytona Beach College of Arts & Sciences 1-29-2005 Vertical Heat and Constituent Transport in the Mesopause Region by Dissipating Gravity Waves at Maui, Hawaii (20.7ºN),

More information

Swedish Institute of Space Physics Research Strategies

Swedish Institute of Space Physics Research Strategies Dnr 1.1-147/14 (replaces Dnr 1-309/04) Swedish Institute of Space Physics Research Strategies The Swedish Institute of Space Physics (IRF) is a national research institute under the auspices of the Swedish

More information

On the possibility to create a prototype of laser system for space debris movement control on the basis of the 3-meter telescope.

On the possibility to create a prototype of laser system for space debris movement control on the basis of the 3-meter telescope. OJC «RPC «Precision Systems and Instruments», Moscow, Russia A. Alexandrov, V. Shargorodskiy On the possibility to create a prototype of laser system for space debris movement control on the basis of the

More information

Lecture 29. Lidar Data Inversion (2)

Lecture 29. Lidar Data Inversion (2) Lecture 9. Lidar Data Inversion ) q Pre-process and Profile-process q Main Process Procedure to Derive T and V R Using Ratio Doppler Technique q Derivations of n c from narrowband resonance Doppler lidar

More information

Lecture 06. Fundamentals of Lidar Remote Sensing (4) Physical Processes in Lidar

Lecture 06. Fundamentals of Lidar Remote Sensing (4) Physical Processes in Lidar Lecture 06. Fundamentals of Lidar Remote Sensing (4) Physical Processes in Lidar Physical processes in lidar (continued) Doppler effect (Doppler shift and broadening) Boltzmann distribution Reflection

More information

Meteor Science and Aeronomy Using the Arecibo VHF and UHF Radars.

Meteor Science and Aeronomy Using the Arecibo VHF and UHF Radars. Meteor Science and Aeronomy Using the Arecibo VHF and UHF Radars. Bolide AIDA 1989 Bolide AIDA was in a near-earth asteroidal orbit with V ~15.5 km/sec, a period of ~1.4 yrs, aubritic compositon, ~30 kg

More information

Lecture 13. Temperature Lidar (2) Resonance Fluorescence Doppler Tech

Lecture 13. Temperature Lidar (2) Resonance Fluorescence Doppler Tech LIDAR REMOTE SENSING PROF. XINZHAO CHU CU-BOULDER, FALL 01 Lecture 13. Temperature Lidar () Resonance Fluorescence Doppler Tech Resonance Fluorescence Na Doppler Lidar Na Structure and Spectroscopy Scanning

More information

Joule heating and nitric oxide in the thermosphere, 2

Joule heating and nitric oxide in the thermosphere, 2 JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 115,, doi:10.1029/2010ja015565, 2010 Joule heating and nitric oxide in the thermosphere, 2 Charles A. Barth 1 Received 14 April 2010; revised 24 June 2010; accepted

More information

Lecture 32. Aerosol & Cloud Lidar (1) Overview & Polar Mesospheric Clouds

Lecture 32. Aerosol & Cloud Lidar (1) Overview & Polar Mesospheric Clouds Lecture 32. Aerosol & Cloud Lidar (1) Overview & Polar Mesospheric Clouds q Motivations to study aerosols and clouds q Lidar detection of aerosols and clouds q Polar mesospheric clouds (PMC) detection

More information

Incoherent Scatter Radar Study of the E region Ionosphere at Arecibo

Incoherent Scatter Radar Study of the E region Ionosphere at Arecibo Incoherent Scatter Radar Study of the E region Ionosphere at Arecibo TheionosphericE regionliesinthealtituderangeof90to150km.thisregionsupportsawide rangeofwaves,includinggravitywaves,tides,andplanetarywaves.inthisregion,theionized

More information

2014 Utah NASA Space Grant Consortium Symposium 1

2014 Utah NASA Space Grant Consortium Symposium 1 2014 Utah NASA Space Grant Consortium Symposium 1 Rayleigh Scatter Lidar Observations of the Midlatitude Mesosphere's Response to Sudden Stratospheric Warmings Leda Sox 1, Vincent B. Wickwar 1, Chad Fish

More information

Whole Atmosphere Simulation of Anthropogenic Climate Change

Whole Atmosphere Simulation of Anthropogenic Climate Change Whole Atmosphere Simulation of Anthropogenic Climate Change Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt High Altitude Observatory National Center for Atmospheric Research

More information

NSRC Atmosphere - Ionosphere Coupling Science Opportunities:

NSRC Atmosphere - Ionosphere Coupling Science Opportunities: NSRC Atmosphere - Ionosphere Coupling Science Opportunities: Sub-Orbital Studies of Gravity Wave Dynamics in the Mesosphere, Thermosphere, and Ionosphere Dave Fritts NorthWest Research Associates/CoRA

More information

Development of Laser Measurement to Space Debris at Shanghai SLR Station

Development of Laser Measurement to Space Debris at Shanghai SLR Station Abstract Development of Laser Measurement to Space Debris at Shanghai SLR Station Zhang Zhongping, Deng Huarong, Tang Kai, Wu Zhibo, Zhang Haifeng (Shanghai Astronomical Observatory of Chinese Academy

More information

Solar Radiophysics with HF Radar

Solar Radiophysics with HF Radar Solar Radiophysics with HF Radar Workshop on Solar Radiophysics With the Frequency Agile Solar Radiotelescope (FASR) 23-25 May 2002 Green Bank, WV Paul Rodriguez Information Technology Division Naval Research

More information

Lecture 12. Temperature Lidar (1) Overview and Physical Principles

Lecture 12. Temperature Lidar (1) Overview and Physical Principles Lecture 2. Temperature Lidar () Overview and Physical Principles q Concept of Temperature Ø Maxwellian velocity distribution & kinetic energy q Temperature Measurement Techniques Ø Direct measurements:

More information

1. Introduction/Goals and expected outcomes

1. Introduction/Goals and expected outcomes Request for use of the NSF Facilities for Education at the University of Colorado Boulder CABL: Characterizing the Atmospheric Boundary Layer Julie K. Lundquist Dept. of Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences

More information

WACCM-X Simulations of Climate Change in the Upper Atmosphere Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt

WACCM-X Simulations of Climate Change in the Upper Atmosphere Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt WACCM-X Simulations of Climate Change in the Upper Atmosphere Stan Solomon, Hanli Liu, Dan Marsh, Joe McInerney, Liying Qian, and Francis Vitt High Altitude Observatory National Center for Atmospheric

More information

Characteristics of Wave Induced Oscillations in Mesospheric O2 Emission Intensity and Temperature

Characteristics of Wave Induced Oscillations in Mesospheric O2 Emission Intensity and Temperature Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU All Physics Faculty Publications Physics 1-2006 Characteristics of Wave Induced Oscillations in Mesospheric O2 Emission Intensity and Temperature A. Taori Michael

More information

Solar Radar and Distributed Multi-static meteor radars/receivers

Solar Radar and Distributed Multi-static meteor radars/receivers Solar Radar and Distributed Multi-static meteor radars/receivers J. L. Chau 1, W. Coles 2 et al. 1 Leibniz Institute of Atmospheric Physics University of Rostock, Kühlungsborn, Germany 2 University of

More information

Copyright 2016 Advanced Maui Optical and Space Surveillance Technologies Conference (AMOS)

Copyright 2016 Advanced Maui Optical and Space Surveillance Technologies Conference (AMOS) Application of satellite laser ranging techniques for space situational awareness efforts M. Shappirio, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center J.F. McGarry, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center J. Bufton, Global

More information

Atmospheric Lidar The Atmospheric Lidar (ATLID) is a high-spectral resolution lidar and will be the first of its type to be flown in space.

Atmospheric Lidar The Atmospheric Lidar (ATLID) is a high-spectral resolution lidar and will be the first of its type to be flown in space. www.esa.int EarthCARE mission instruments ESA s EarthCARE satellite payload comprises four instruments: the Atmospheric Lidar, the Cloud Profiling Radar, the Multi-Spectral Imager and the Broad-Band Radiometer.

More information

Sodium fluorescence Doppler lidar to measure atmospheric temperature in the mesopause region

Sodium fluorescence Doppler lidar to measure atmospheric temperature in the mesopause region Article Atmospheric Science February 2011 Vol.56 No.4-5: 417 423 doi: 10.1007/s11434-010-4306-x SPECIAL TOPICS: Sodium fluorescence Doppler lidar to measure atmospheric temperature in the mesopause region

More information

Simultaneous measurements of dynamical structure in the mesopause region with lidars and MU radar

Simultaneous measurements of dynamical structure in the mesopause region with lidars and MU radar Earth Planets Space, 51, 731 739, 1999 Simultaneous measurements of dynamical structure in the mesopause region with lidars and MU radar K. Kobayashi 1, T. Kitahara 1, T. D. Kawahara 1, Y. Saito 1, A.

More information

NTUA. A. Georgakopoulou. A. Papayannis1, A. Aravantinos2 NATIONAL TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF ATHENS TECHNOLOGICAL EDUCATIONAL INSTIDUTION OF ATHENS SIENA

NTUA. A. Georgakopoulou. A. Papayannis1, A. Aravantinos2 NATIONAL TECHNICAL UNIVERSITY OF ATHENS TECHNOLOGICAL EDUCATIONAL INSTIDUTION OF ATHENS SIENA High Spectral Resolution LIDAR Receivers, to Measure Aerosol to Molecular Scattering Ratio in Bistatic Mode, for use in Atmospheric Monitoring for EAS Detectors E. Fokitis1, P. Fetfatzis1, 1, S. Maltezos1

More information

Neutral Winds in the Upper Atmosphere. Qian Wu National Center for Atmospheric Research

Neutral Winds in the Upper Atmosphere. Qian Wu National Center for Atmospheric Research Neutral Winds in the Upper Atmosphere Qian Wu National Center for Atmospheric Research Outline Overview of the upper atmosphere. Ozone heating. Neutral wind tides (the strongest dynamic feature). Why do

More information

Exploring the Atmosphere with Lidars

Exploring the Atmosphere with Lidars Exploring the Atmosphere with Lidars 2. Types of Lidars S Veerabuthiran S Veerabuthiran is working as a research fellow in Space Physics Laboratory, Vikram Sarabhai Space Centre, Trivandrum. His research

More information

Observational investigations of gravity wave momentum flux with spectroscopic imaging

Observational investigations of gravity wave momentum flux with spectroscopic imaging JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 110,, doi:10.1029/2004jd004778, 2005 Observational investigations of gravity wave momentum flux with spectroscopic imaging J. Tang, G. R. Swenson, A. Z. Liu, and F.

More information

Comparison of Meteor Radar and Na Doppler Lidar Measurements of Winds in the Mesopause Region Above Maui, HI

Comparison of Meteor Radar and Na Doppler Lidar Measurements of Winds in the Mesopause Region Above Maui, HI JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL., XXXX, DOI:10.1029/, Comparison of Meteor Radar and Na Doppler Lidar Measurements of Winds in the Mesopause Region Above Maui, HI S. J. Franke, X. Chu, A. Z. Liu Department

More information

State of the art in mesosphere science John Meriwether Department of Physics and Astronomy Clemson University

State of the art in mesosphere science John Meriwether Department of Physics and Astronomy Clemson University CEDAR Tutorial #3 Thursday June 28, 2007 State of the art in mesosphere science John Meriwether Department of Physics and Astronomy Clemson University 22+ years of progress since ignorasphere was coined

More information

Simultaneous Observations of E-Region Coherent Backscatter and Electric Field Amplitude at F-Region Heights with the Millstone Hill UHF Radar

Simultaneous Observations of E-Region Coherent Backscatter and Electric Field Amplitude at F-Region Heights with the Millstone Hill UHF Radar Simultaneous Observations of E-Region Coherent Backscatter and Electric Field Amplitude at F-Region Heights with the Millstone Hill UHF Radar J. C. Foster and P. J. Erickson MIT Haystack Observatory Abstract

More information

Eddy turbulence parameters inferred from radar observations at Jicamarca

Eddy turbulence parameters inferred from radar observations at Jicamarca Ann. Geophys., 5, 475 481, 007 www.ann-geophys.net/5/475/007/ European Geosciences Union 007 Annales Geophysicae Eddy turbulence parameters inferred from radar observations at Jicamarca M. N. Vlasov 1,

More information

The Design and Construction of an Airborne High Spectral Resolution Lidar.

The Design and Construction of an Airborne High Spectral Resolution Lidar. The Design and Construction of an Airborne High Spectral Resolution Lidar. E. W. Eloranta, I. A. Razenkov, J. Hedrick and J. P. Garcia Space Science and Engineering Center University of Wisconsin-Madison

More information

Dynamical and Thermal Effects of Gravity Waves in the Terrestrial Thermosphere-Ionosphere

Dynamical and Thermal Effects of Gravity Waves in the Terrestrial Thermosphere-Ionosphere 1/25 Dynamical and Thermal Effects of Gravity Waves in the Terrestrial Thermosphere-Ionosphere Erdal Yiğit 1,3, Alexander S. Medvedev 2, and Aaron J. Ridley 1 1 University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, USA 2

More information

Lecture 20. Wind Lidar (1) Overview Wind Technologies

Lecture 20. Wind Lidar (1) Overview Wind Technologies Lecture 20. Wind Lidar (1) Overview Wind Technologies q Motivations to measure global winds q Overview of wind measurement techniques Ø Direct Motion Detection Technique Ø Coherent Detection Doppler Wind

More information

Lecture 20. Wind Lidar (2) Vector Wind Determination

Lecture 20. Wind Lidar (2) Vector Wind Determination Lecture 20. Wind Lidar (2) Vector Wind Determination Vector wind determination Ideal vector wind measurement VAD and DBS technique for vector wind Coherent versus incoherent Detection Doppler wind lidar

More information

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE

PROFESSIONAL EXPERIENCE RESUME Xian Lu PERSONAL DATA Assistant Professor Department of Physics and Astronomy 302A Kinard Laboratory Clemson University Clemson, SC 29634 864/656-4204 EDUCATION Ph.D., University of Illinois at

More information

ABB Remote Sensing Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer AERI system overview. Applications

ABB Remote Sensing Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer AERI system overview. Applications The ABB Atmospheric Emitted Radiance Interferometer AERI provides thermodynamic profiling, trace gas detection, atmospheric cloud aerosol study, air quality monitoring, and more. AERI high level overview

More information

Japanese Sounding Rocket Activities

Japanese Sounding Rocket Activities Japanese Sounding Rocket Activities Takumi Abe Institute of Space and Astronautical Science Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency April 14-16, 2010 Workshop on Suborbital Platforms and Nanosatellites 1 OUTLINE

More information

Thermospheric Winds. Astrid Maute. High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Science (NCAR) Boulder CO, USA

Thermospheric Winds. Astrid Maute. High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Science (NCAR) Boulder CO, USA Thermospheric Winds Astrid Maute High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Science (NCAR) Boulder CO, USA High Altitude Observatory (HAO) National Center for Atmospheric Research

More information

Diurnal variation of tropospheric temperature at a tropical station

Diurnal variation of tropospheric temperature at a tropical station Diurnal variation of tropospheric temperature at a tropical station K. Revathy, S. R. Prabhakaran Nayar, B. V. Krishna Murthy To cite this version: K. Revathy, S. R. Prabhakaran Nayar, B. V. Krishna Murthy.

More information

Fabry-Perot Interferometer for atmospheric monitoring useful for EAS detection E.Fokitis 1, K. Patrinos 1, Z. Nikitaki 1

Fabry-Perot Interferometer for atmospheric monitoring useful for EAS detection E.Fokitis 1, K. Patrinos 1, Z. Nikitaki 1 Fabry-Perot Interferometer for atmospheric monitoring useful for EAS detection E.Fokitis 1, K. Patrinos 1, Z. Nikitaki 1 ABSTRACT A piezotunable Fabry-Perot interferometer is studied as a candidate Doppler

More information

Thoughts on LWA/FASR Synergy

Thoughts on LWA/FASR Synergy Thoughts on LWA/FASR Synergy Namir Kassim Naval Research Laboratory 5/27/2003 LWA-FASR 1 Ionospheric Waves 74 MHz phase 74 MHz model Ionosphere unwound (Kassim et al. 1993) Ionospheric

More information

Lecture 11: Doppler wind lidar

Lecture 11: Doppler wind lidar Lecture 11: Doppler wind lidar Why do we study winds? v Winds are the most important variable studying dynamics and transport in the atmosphere. v Wind measurements are critical to improvement of numerical

More information

Lecture 32. Lidar Error and Sensitivity Analysis

Lecture 32. Lidar Error and Sensitivity Analysis Lecture 3. Lidar Error and Sensitivity Analysis Introduction Accuracy in lidar measurements Precision in lidar measurements Error analysis for Na Doppler lidar Sensitivity analysis Summary 1 Errors vs.

More information

Simulating the Ionosphere, one electron at a time.

Simulating the Ionosphere, one electron at a time. Simulating the Ionosphere, one electron at a time. Meers Oppenheim CEDAR June 2016 Research supported by NSF, NASA, AFRL, and DOE Grants What? Plasma Physics Particle-in-Cell Simulations Two Examples:

More information

Imaging coherent scatter radar, incoherent scatter radar, and optical observations of quasiperiodic structures associated with sporadic E layers

Imaging coherent scatter radar, incoherent scatter radar, and optical observations of quasiperiodic structures associated with sporadic E layers Click Here for Full Article JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, VOL. 112,, doi:10.1029/2006ja012051, 2007 Imaging coherent scatter radar, incoherent scatter radar, and optical observations of quasiperiodic

More information

DWTS The Doppler Wind and Temperature Sounder

DWTS The Doppler Wind and Temperature Sounder DWTS The Doppler Wind and Temperature Sounder Quantifying the Neutral Drivers of Weather and Space Weather Dave Fritts Larry Gordley GLOBAL ATMOSPHERIC TECHNOLOGIES AND SCIENCES (GATS) Outline - Need for

More information

Gravity Waves Over Antarctica

Gravity Waves Over Antarctica Utah State University DigitalCommons@USU Physics Capstone Project Physics Student Research 5-2018 Gravity Waves Over Antarctica Vanessa Chambers Utah State University Follow this and additional works at:

More information

NASA s Contribution to International Living With a Star

NASA s Contribution to International Living With a Star NASA s Contribution to International Living With a Star Madhulika Guhathakurta Office of Space Science, CodeSS NASA Headquarters October 17,2002 Sun-Earth Connection (Sec) Program Planet Varying Radiation

More information

Enhanced gravity wave activity over the equatorial MLT region during counter electrojet events

Enhanced gravity wave activity over the equatorial MLT region during counter electrojet events Indian Journal of Radio & Space Physics Vol 41, April 2012, pp 258-263 Enhanced gravity wave activity over the equatorial MLT region during counter electrojet events C Vineeth $,*, T K Pant & M M Hossain

More information

Lecture 06. Fundamentals of Lidar Remote Sensing (4) Physical Processes in Lidar

Lecture 06. Fundamentals of Lidar Remote Sensing (4) Physical Processes in Lidar Lecture 06. Fundamentals of Lidar Remote Sensing (4) Physical Processes in Lidar Light interactions with objects (continued) Resonance fluorescence Laser induced fluorescence Doppler effect (Doppler shift

More information

Miniaturization of High Sensitivity Laser Sensing Systems. Damien Weidmann

Miniaturization of High Sensitivity Laser Sensing Systems. Damien Weidmann Miniaturization of High Sensitivity Laser Sensing Systems Damien Weidmann Outline Drivers for miniaturization Molecular fingerprinting in the Mid IR Optical integration technologies Forward looking examples

More information

The Equatorial Ionosphere: A Tutorial

The Equatorial Ionosphere: A Tutorial The Equatorial Ionosphere: A Tutorial Bela G. Fejer Center for Atmospheric and Space Science Utah State University Logan, Utah CEDAR Meeting Seattle, WA June 2015 The Equatorial Ionosphere Outline Introduction

More information

AMISR Contributions to Equatorial Aeronomy

AMISR Contributions to Equatorial Aeronomy AMISR Contributions to Equatorial Aeronomy p. 1/2 AMISR Contributions to Equatorial Aeronomy D. L. Hysell and J. L. Chau http://jro.igp.gob.pe Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Cornell University, Ithaca,

More information

Lecture 30. Lidar Error and Sensitivity Analysis

Lecture 30. Lidar Error and Sensitivity Analysis Lecture 30. Lidar Error and Sensitivity Analysis q Introduction q Accuracy versus Precision q Accuracy in lidar measurements q Precision in lidar measurements q Propagation of errors vs. differential method

More information

Space Physics: Recent Advances and Near-term Challenge. Chi Wang. National Space Science Center, CAS

Space Physics: Recent Advances and Near-term Challenge. Chi Wang. National Space Science Center, CAS Space Physics: Recent Advances and Near-term Challenge Chi Wang National Space Science Center, CAS Feb.25, 2014 Contents Significant advances from the past decade Key scientific challenges Future missions

More information

Optical Remote Sensing Techniques Characterize the Properties of Atmospheric Aerosols

Optical Remote Sensing Techniques Characterize the Properties of Atmospheric Aerosols Optical Remote Sensing Techniques Characterize the Properties of Atmospheric Aerosols Russell Philbrick a,b,c, Hans Hallen a, Andrea Wyant c, Tim Wright b, and Michelle Snyder a a Physics Department, and

More information

Sodium Guidestar Radiometry Results from the SOR's 50W Fasor

Sodium Guidestar Radiometry Results from the SOR's 50W Fasor Sodium Guidestar Radiometry Results from the SOR's 50W Fasor Jack Drummond, Steve Novotny, Craig Denman, Paul Hillman, John Telle, Gerald Moore Starfire Optical Range, Directed Energy Directorate, Air

More information

NICT Lidar Systems at Poker Flat Research Range

NICT Lidar Systems at Poker Flat Research Range NICT Lidar Systems at Poker Flat Research Range MIZUTANI Kohei, ITABE Toshikazu, YASUI Motoaki, AOKI Tetsuo, ISHII Shoken, MURAYAMA Yasuhiro, SASANO Masahiko, YOSHIOKA Kensuke, OHTANI Yoshiko, and Richard

More information

Lecture 14. Principles of active remote sensing: Lidars. Lidar sensing of gases, aerosols, and clouds.

Lecture 14. Principles of active remote sensing: Lidars. Lidar sensing of gases, aerosols, and clouds. Lecture 14. Principles of active remote sensing: Lidars. Lidar sensing of gases, aerosols, and clouds. 1. Optical interactions of relevance to lasers. 2. General principles of lidars. 3. Lidar equation.

More information

Retrieval of the vertical temperature profile of atmosphere from MST radar backscattered signal

Retrieval of the vertical temperature profile of atmosphere from MST radar backscattered signal Indian Journal of Radio & Space Physics Vol. 35, August 6, pp. 8-85 Retrieval of the vertical temperature profile of atmosphere from MST radar backscattered signal I M L Das 1, & Pramod Kumar 1 M N Saha

More information

Suborbital Research in the Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere a New Window on the Turbopause Region

Suborbital Research in the Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere a New Window on the Turbopause Region Suborbital Research in the Mesosphere and Lower Thermosphere a New Window on the Turbopause Region Michael E. Summers George Mason University Mesosphere-Lower Thermosphere (MLT) Next-Gen Reusable Suborbital

More information

Auroral Plasma Dynamics Revealed through Radio-Optical Sensor Fusion

Auroral Plasma Dynamics Revealed through Radio-Optical Sensor Fusion Auroral Plasma Dynamics Revealed through Radio-Optical Sensor Fusion Joshua Semeter Boston University Center for Space Physics Acknowledgements: Sebastijan Mrak, Brent Parham, Nithin Sivadas, John Swoboda,

More information

Chapter 4 Nadir looking UV measurement. Part-I: Theory and algorithm

Chapter 4 Nadir looking UV measurement. Part-I: Theory and algorithm Chapter 4 Nadir looking UV measurement. Part-I: Theory and algorithm -Aerosol and tropospheric ozone retrieval method using continuous UV spectra- Atmospheric composition measurements from satellites are

More information

Lecture 33. Aerosol Lidar (2)

Lecture 33. Aerosol Lidar (2) Lecture 33. Aerosol Lidar (2) Elastic Scattering, Raman, HSRL q Elastic-scattering lidar for aerosol detection q Single-channel vs multi-channel aerosol lidars q Measurement of aerosol extinction from

More information

Lecture 15. Temperature Lidar (4) Doppler Techniques

Lecture 15. Temperature Lidar (4) Doppler Techniques Lecture 15. Temperature Lidar (4) Doppler Techniques q Doppler effects in absorption and backscatter coefficient vs. cross-section q Doppler Technique to Measure Temperature and Wind Ø Doppler Shift and

More information

Observations of Persistent Leonid Meteor Trails. 1. Advection of the "Diamond Ring"

Observations of Persistent Leonid Meteor Trails. 1. Advection of the Diamond Ring Department of Physical Sciences - Daytona Beach College of Arts & Sciences 10-1-2001 Observations of Persistent Leonid Meteor Trails. 1. Advection of the "Diamond Ring" Jack D. Drummond Brent W. Grime

More information

EARLY RAYLEIGH-SCATTER LIDAR TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS FROM THE LOWER THERMOSPHERE

EARLY RAYLEIGH-SCATTER LIDAR TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS FROM THE LOWER THERMOSPHERE EARLY RAYLEIGH-SCATTER LIDAR TEMPERATURE MEASUREMENTS FROM THE LOWER THERMOSPHERE Leda Sox and Vincent B. Wickwar Physics Department and Center for Atmospheric and Space Sciences, Utah State University,

More information

Xian Lu. Assistant Professor Physics and Astronomy Clemson University Phone:

Xian Lu. Assistant Professor Physics and Astronomy Clemson University   Phone: 1 Xian Lu Assistant Professor Physics and Astronomy Clemson University Email: xianl@clemson.edu Phone: 864-656-4204 Xian Lu is an assistant professor in the Department of Physics and Astronomy at Clemson

More information

Lecture 27. Lidar Data Inversion (1)

Lecture 27. Lidar Data Inversion (1) LIDA EMOTE SENSING POF. XINZHAO CHU CU-BOULDE, FALL 0 Lecture 7. Lidar Data Inversion Introduction of data inversion Basic ideas clues for lidar data inversion Preprocess Profile process Main process next

More information

Influence of Sudden Stratosphere Warmings on the Ionosphere and Thermosphere

Influence of Sudden Stratosphere Warmings on the Ionosphere and Thermosphere Influence of Sudden Stratosphere Warmings on the Ionosphere and Thermosphere Nick Pedatella 1,2 1 High Altitude Observatory, National Center for Atmospheric Research 2 COSMIC Program Office, University

More information

Remote Sensing Systems Overview

Remote Sensing Systems Overview Remote Sensing Systems Overview Remote Sensing = Measuring without touching Class objectives: Learn principles for system-level understanding and analysis of electro-magnetic remote sensing instruments

More information

Impact of COSMIC observations in a whole atmosphere-ionosphere data assimilation model

Impact of COSMIC observations in a whole atmosphere-ionosphere data assimilation model Impact of COSMIC observations in a whole atmosphere-ionosphere data assimilation model Nick Pedatella 1,2, Hanli Liu 1, Jing Liu 1, Jeffrey Anderson 3, and Kevin Raeder 3 1 High Altitude Observatory, NCAR

More information

Japanese Sounding Rocket Activity in Scandinavia

Japanese Sounding Rocket Activity in Scandinavia Japanese Sounding Rocket Activity in Scandinavia - Importance of ground-based support - Takumi Abe Institute of Space & Astronautical Science Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency NIPR Symposium on Conjugate

More information

Radio Telescopes of the Future

Radio Telescopes of the Future Radio Telescopes of the Future Cristina García Miró Madrid Deep Space Communications Complex NASA/INTA AVN Training School HartRAO, March 2017 Radio Telescopes of the Future Characteristics FAST SKA (EHT)

More information

Labor für Photonik Prof. Dr. U. Wittrock. Executive. Summary

Labor für Photonik Prof. Dr. U. Wittrock.   Executive. Summary Labor für Photonik Prof. Dr. U. Wittrock www.photonics-lab.de Perspective of Solarr Pumping of Solid State Lasers for ESA Missions 4000106760/12/NL/CO Executive Summary Ulrich Wittrock intentionally left

More information

PoS(ICRC2015)568. An Estimate of the Live Time of Optical Measurements of Air Showers at the South Pole

PoS(ICRC2015)568. An Estimate of the Live Time of Optical Measurements of Air Showers at the South Pole An Estimate of the Live Time of Optical Measurements of Air Showers at the South Pole a and Stephen Drury a a Department of Physics and Astronomy, University of Rochester, Rochester, NY, USA Email: sybenzvi@pas.rochester.edu

More information

Astronomy. Optics and Telescopes

Astronomy. Optics and Telescopes Astronomy A. Dayle Hancock adhancock@wm.edu Small 239 Office hours: MTWR 10-11am Optics and Telescopes - Refraction, lenses and refracting telescopes - Mirrors and reflecting telescopes - Diffraction limit,

More information

Chapter 5. Telescopes. Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display.

Chapter 5. Telescopes. Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Chapter 5 Telescopes Copyright (c) The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required for reproduction or display. Learning Objectives Upon completing this chapter you should be able to: 1. Classify the

More information

Thomson Scattering from Nonlinear Electron Plasma Waves

Thomson Scattering from Nonlinear Electron Plasma Waves Thomson Scattering from Nonlinear Electron Plasma Waves A. DAVIES, 1 J. KATZ, 1 S. BUCHT, 1 D. HABERBERGER, 1 J. BROMAGE, 1 J. D. ZUEGEL, 1 J. D. SADLER, 2 P. A. NORREYS, 3 R. BINGHAM, 4 R. TRINES, 5 L.O.

More information

Dynamical coupling between the middle atmosphere and lower thermosphere

Dynamical coupling between the middle atmosphere and lower thermosphere Dynamical coupling between the middle atmosphere and lower thermosphere Anne Smith, Dan Marsh, Nick Pedatella NCAR* Tomoko Matsuo CIRES/NOAA NCAR is sponsored by the National Science Foundation Model runs

More information

MONITORING VARIATIONS TO THE NEAR-EARTH SPACE ENVIRONMENT DURING HIGH SOLAR ACTIVITY USING ORBITING ROCKET BODIES

MONITORING VARIATIONS TO THE NEAR-EARTH SPACE ENVIRONMENT DURING HIGH SOLAR ACTIVITY USING ORBITING ROCKET BODIES MONITORING VARIATIONS TO THE NEAR-EARTH SPACE ENVIRONMENT DURING HIGH SOLAR ACTIVITY USING ORBITING ROCKET BODIES Van Romero, William H. Ryan, and Eileen V. Ryan Magdalena Ridge Observatory, New Mexico

More information

Imaging the Earth from the Moon FUV Imaging of the Earth s Space Weather. Dr. Larry J. Paxton (office)

Imaging the Earth from the Moon FUV Imaging of the Earth s Space Weather. Dr. Larry J. Paxton (office) Imaging the Earth from the Moon FUV Imaging of the Earth s Space Weather Dr. Larry J. Paxton 240 228 6871 (office) Larry.paxton@jhuapl.edu Making Observations of the Earth from the Moon Makes Sense Once

More information

PLANET-C: Venus Climate Orbiter mission from Japan. Takeshi Imamura Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency PLANET-C team

PLANET-C: Venus Climate Orbiter mission from Japan. Takeshi Imamura Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency PLANET-C team PLANET-C: Venus Climate Orbiter mission from Japan Takeshi Imamura Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency PLANET-C team Venus Climate Orbiter JAXA s 24th science spacecraft dedicated to the exploration of

More information