Abstract

Temperature detection remains challenging in the low stratosphere, where the Rayleigh integration lidar is perturbed by aerosol contamination and ozone absorption while the rotational Raman lidar is suffered from its low scattering cross section. To correct the impacts of temperature on the Rayleigh Doppler lidar, a high spectral resolution lidar (HSRL) based on cavity scanning Fabry-Perot Interferometer (FPI) is developed. By considering the effect of the laser spectral width, Doppler broadening of the molecular backscatter, divergence of the light beam and mirror defects of the FPI, a well-behaved transmission function is proved to show the principle of HSRL in detail. Analysis of the statistical error of the HSRL is carried out in the data processing. A temperature lidar using both HSRL and Rayleigh integration techniques is incorporated into the Rayleigh Doppler wind lidar. Simultaneous wind and temperature detection is carried out based on the combined system at Delhi (37.371°N, 97.374°E; 2850 m above the sea level) in Qinghai province, China. Lower Stratosphere temperature has been measured using HSRL between 18 and 50 km with temporal resolution of 2000 seconds. The statistical error of the derived temperatures is between 0.2 and 9.2 K. The temperature profile retrieved from the HSRL and wind profile from the Rayleigh Doppler lidar show good agreement with the radiosonde data. Specifically, the max temperature deviation between the HSRL and radiosonde is 4.7 K from 18 km to 36 km, and it is 2.7 K between the HSRL and Rayleigh integration lidar from 27 km to 34 km.

Highlights

  • The middle atmosphere is that portion of the Earth’s atmosphere between two temperature minima at about 12 km altitude and at about 85 km, comprising the stratosphere and mesosphere

  • The overview above comes to a conclusion that the temperature detection remains challenging in the low stratosphere, where the Rayleigh integration lidar is perturbed by aerosol contamination and ozone absorption while the rotational Raman lidar is suffered from its low scattering cross section

  • Temperature profile plays an important role in atmospheric research

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Summary

Introduction

The middle atmosphere is that portion of the Earth’s atmosphere between two temperature minima at about 12 km altitude (the tropopause) and at about 85 km (the mesopause), comprising the stratosphere and mesosphere. The overview above comes to a conclusion that the temperature detection remains challenging in the low stratosphere, where the Rayleigh integration lidar is perturbed by aerosol contamination and ozone absorption while the rotational Raman lidar is suffered from its low scattering cross section. The lidar signal is measured before and passing through a static filter, for instance, a fixed FPI, Michelson interferometers, atomic or molecular absorption cells. It resolves the temperature dependent transmission of the Cabannes line through the filters [25,26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35]. The combined system permits atmospheric temperature and wind detection simultaneously

Principle
Instrument
Experiments
Findings
Conclusion and future research
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