# Joint Elastic Side-Scattering Lidar and Raman Lidar Measurements of   Aerosol Optical Properties in South East Colorado

**Authors:** L. Wiencke, V. Rizi, M. Will, C. Allen, A. Botts, M. Calhoun, B., Carande, J. Claus, M. Coco, L. Emmert, S. Esquibel, A. F. Grillo, L., Hamilton, T. J. Heid, M. Iarlori, H.-O. Klages, M. Kleifges, B. Knoll, J., Koop, H.-J. Mathes, A. Menshikov, S. Morgan, L. Patterson, S. Petrera, S., Robinson, C. Runyan, J. Sherman, D. Starbuck, M. Wakin, O. Wolf

arXiv: 1704.04417 · 2017-04-17

## TL;DR

This study combines Raman and elastic side-scattering Lidar techniques to measure aerosol optical depth profiles in Colorado, aiming to enhance atmospheric clarity assessments for cosmic ray detection.

## Contribution

It introduces a dual-Lidar measurement approach in a single experiment to compare and improve aerosol optical depth profiling methods.

## Key findings

- Raman and elastic Lidar measurements show consistent aerosol profiles.
- The combined approach improves accuracy in atmospheric clarity assessment.
- Data collected under varying aerosol conditions enhances method robustness.

## Abstract

We describe an experiment, located in south-east Colorado, USA, that measured aerosol optical depth profiles using two Lidar techniques. Two independent detectors measured scattered light from a vertical UV laser beam. One detector, located at the laser site, measured light via the inelastic Raman backscattering process. This is a common method used in atmospheric science for measuring aerosol optical depth profiles. The other detector, located approximately 40km distant, viewed the laser beam from the side. This detector featured a 3.5m2 mirror and measured elastically scattered light in a bistatic Lidar configuration following the method used at the Pierre Auger cosmic ray observatory. The goal of this experiment was to assess and improve methods to measure atmospheric clarity, specifically aerosol optical depth profiles, for cosmic ray UV fluorescence detectors that use the atmosphere as a giant calorimeter. The experiment collected data from September 2010 to July 2011 under varying conditions of aerosol loading. We describe the instruments and techniques and compare the aerosol optical depth profiles measured by the Raman and bistatic Lidar detectors.

## Full text

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## Figures

37 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.04417/full.md

## References

23 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.04417/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1704.04417