Cloud Physics Lidar

Status

Status
Operational
Operated By
PI

The Cloud Physics Lidar, or CPL, is a backscatter lidar designed to operate simultaneously at 3 wavelengths: 1064, 532, and 355 nm. The purpose of the CPL is to provide multi-wavelength measurements of cirrus, subvisual cirrus, and aerosols with high temporal and spatial resolution. Figure 1 shows the entire CPL package in flight configuration. The CPL utilizes state-of-the-art technology with a high repetition rate, low pulse energy laser and photon-counting detection. Vertical resolution of the CPL measurements is fixed at 30 m; horizontal resolution can vary but is typically about 200 m. The CPL fundamentally measures range-resolved profiles of volume 180-degree backscatter coefficients. From the fundamental measurement, various data products are derived, including: time-height crosssection images; cloud and aerosol layer boundaries; optical depth for clouds, aerosol layers, and planetary boundary layer (PBL); and extinction profiles. The CPL was designed to fly on the NASA ER-2 aircraft but is adaptable to other platforms. Because the ER-2 typically flies at about 65,000 feet (20 km), onboard instruments are above 94% of the earth’s atmosphere, allowing ER-2 instruments to function as spaceborne instrument simulators. The ER-2 provides a unique platform for atmospheric profiling, particularly for active remote sensing instruments such as lidar, because the spatial coverage attainable by the ER-2 permits studies of aerosol properties across wide regions. Lidar profiling from the ER-2 platform is especially valuable because the cloud height structure, up to the limit of signal attenuation, is unambiguously measured.

Instrument Type
Recent Missions
(ER-2 - AFRC)
;
(ER-2 - AFRC)
;
(ER-2 - AFRC)
;
(Global Hawk - AFRC)
;
(Global Hawk - AFRC)
;
(Global Hawk - AFRC)
Point(s) of Contact
(POC; PI),
(Prev PI)
Range of Measurement
Vertical profile
Instrument Pointing
Nadir (directly downwards)
Measurement Sampling Rate
1.00 Hz
Vertical Resolution
30.00 m
Weight
171.00 kg
Location
Forward section of the wing superpod on the ER-2.
Notes
50/25/50 microJ per pulse
Mission-Specific Writeups
TRL
9