Atmospheric Measurement Techniques (Mar 2015)

Field-deployable diode-laser-based differential absorption lidar (DIAL) for profiling water vapor

  • S. M. Spuler,
  • K. S. Repasky,
  • B. Morley,
  • D. Moen,
  • M. Hayman,
  • A. R. Nehrir

DOI
https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-8-1073-2015
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 3
pp. 1073 – 1087

Abstract

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A field-deployable water vapor profiling instrument that builds on the foundation of the preceding generations of diode-laser-based differential absorption lidar (DIAL) laboratory prototypes was constructed and tested. Significant advances are discussed, including a unique shared telescope design that allows expansion of the outgoing beam for eye-safe operation with optomechanical and thermal stability; multistage optical filtering enabling measurement during daytime bright-cloud conditions; rapid spectral switching between the online and offline wavelengths enabling measurements during changing atmospheric conditions; and enhanced performance at lower ranges by the introduction of a new filter design and the addition of a wide field-of-view channel. Performance modeling, testing, and intercomparisons are performed and discussed. In general, the instrument has a 150 m range resolution with a 10 min temporal resolution; 1 min temporal resolution in the lowest 2 km of the atmosphere is demonstrated. The instrument is shown capable of autonomous long-term field operation – 50 days with a > 95% uptime – under a broad set of atmospheric conditions and potentially forms the basis for a ground-based network of eye-safe autonomous instruments needed for the atmospheric sciences research and forecasting communities.