Abstract
It is shown that a differential absorption lidar employing a pulsed CO2 laser and a direct detection receiver is capable of significantly improving the existing data base on the tropospheric ozone burden. As a ground-based system, the lidar could obtain urban to regional scale O3 measurements with a vertical or horizontal resolution of at least 1 km in the troposphere. As a space-based system, it could obtain global scale coverage of the O3 burden below the stratospheric maximum of O3.
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