Abstract

Abstract. The acquisition of atmospheric wind profiles on a global scale was realized by the launch of the Aeolus satellite, carrying the unique Atmospheric LAser Doppler INstrument (ALADIN), the first Doppler wind lidar in space. One major component of ALADIN is its high-power, ultraviolet (UV) laser transmitter, which is based on an injection-seeded, frequency-tripled Nd:YAG laser and fulfills a set of demanding requirements in terms of pulse energy, pulse length, repetition rate, and spatial and spectral beam properties. In particular, the frequency stability of the laser emission is an essential parameter which determines the performance of the lidar instrument as the Doppler frequency shifts to be detected are on the order of 108 smaller than the frequency of the emitted UV light. This article reports the assessment of the ALADIN laser frequency stability and its influence on the quality of the Aeolus wind data. Excellent frequency stability with pulse-to-pulse variations of about 10 MHz (root mean square) is evident for over more than 2 years of operations in space despite the permanent occurrence of short periods with significantly enhanced frequency noise (> 30 MHz). The latter were found to coincide with specific rotation speeds of the satellite's reaction wheels, suggesting that the root cause are micro-vibrations that deteriorate the laser stability on timescales of a few tens of seconds. Analysis of the Aeolus wind error with respect to European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) model winds shows that the temporally degraded frequency stability of the ALADIN laser transmitter has only a minor influence on the wind data quality on a global scale, which is primarily due to the small percentage of wind measurements for which the frequency fluctuations are considerably enhanced. Hence, although the Mie wind bias is increased by 0.3 m s−1 at times when the frequency stability is worse than 20 MHz, the small contribution of 4 % from all Mie wind results renders this effect insignificant (< 0.1 m s−1) when all winds are considered. The impact on the Rayleigh wind bias is negligible even at high frequency noise. Similar results are demonstrated for the apparent speed of the ground returns that are measured with the Mie and Rayleigh channel of the ALADIN receiver. Here, the application of a frequency stability threshold that filters out wind observations with variations larger than 20 or 10 MHz improves the accuracy of the Mie and Rayleigh ground velocities by only 0.05 and 0.10 m s−1, respectively, however at the expense of useful ground data.

Highlights

  • The launch of the European Space Agency (ESA)’s Aeolus mission in August 2018 was an influential event in the history of spaceborne active remote sensing (Stith et al, 2018; Kanitz et al, 2019; Parrinello et al, 2020)

  • The frequency stability of the Atmospheric LAser Doppler INstrument (ALADIN) laser is first presented with one example, namely the week in October 2019, to illustrate the main temporal characteristics of the spectral behavior as well as the relation to the geolocation of the satellite

  • This leads to the correlation of the laser frequency stability with platform parameters, the reaction wheel speeds, which is elaborated on subsequently

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Summary

Introduction

The launch of the ESA’s Aeolus mission in August 2018 was an influential event in the history of spaceborne active remote sensing (Stith et al, 2018; Kanitz et al, 2019; Parrinello et al, 2020). Recent assessments of the significance of the Aeolus data for NWP have demonstrated a statistically positive impact, especially in the tropics and at the poles, providing a useful contribution to the GOS (Rennie and Isaksen, 2020; Rennie et al, 2021; Martin et al, 2021). This was made possible by the identification of and correction for large systematic errors which had strongly degraded the wind data quality in the initial phase of the mission (Kanitz et al, 2020; Reitebuch et al, 2020). Biases that were found to be closely correlated with small variations in the temperature distribution across the primary telescope mirror (Rennie and Isaksen, 2020; Weiler et al, 2021b) were corrected

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