Comparison of scanning aerosol lidar and in situ measurements of aerosol physical properties and boundary layer heights

Abstract: The spatiotemporal distribution of aerosol particles in the atmosphere has a great impact on radiative transfer, clouds, and air quality. Modern remote sensing methods, as well as airborne in situ measure- ments by unpiloted aerial vehicles (UAV) or balloons, are suitable tools to improve our understanding of the role of aerosol particles in the atmosphere. To validate the measurement capabilities of three relatively new measurement systems and to bridge the gaps that are often encountered between remote sensing and in situ ob- servation, as well as to investigate aerosol particles in and above the boundary layer, we conducted two measure- ment campaigns and collected a comprehensive dataset employing a scanning aerosol lidar, a balloon-borne ra- diosonde with the Compact Optical Backscatter Aerosol Detector (COBALD), an optical particle counter (OPC) on a UAV, and a comprehensive set of ground-based instruments. The extinction coefficients calculated from near-ground-level aerosol size distributions measured in situ are well correlated with those retrieved from lidar measurements, with a slope of 1.037 ± 0.015 and a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.878, respectively. Verti- cal profiles measured by an OPC-N3 on a UAV show similar vertical particle distributions and boundary layer heights to lidar measurements. However, the sensor, OPC-N3, shows a larger variability in the aerosol backscat- ter coefficient measurements, with a Pearson correlation coefficient of only 0.241. In contrast, the COBALD data from a balloon flight are well correlated with lidar-derived backscatter data from the near-ground level up to the stratosphere, with a slope of 1.063 ± 0.016 and a Pearson correlation coefficient of 0.925, respectively. This consistency between lidar and COBALD data reflects the good data quality of both methods and proves that lidar can provide reliable and spatial distributions of aerosol particles with high spatial and temporal resolutions. This study shows that the scanning lidar has the capability to retrieve backscatter coefficients near the ground level (from 25 to 50 m above ground level) when it conducts horizontal measurement, which is not possible for verti- cally pointing lidar. These near-ground-level retrievals compare well with ground-level in situ measurements. In addition, in situ measurements on the balloon and UAV validated the scanning lidar retrievals within and above the boundary layer. The scanning aerosol lidar allows us to measure aerosol particle distributions and profiles from the ground level to the stratosphere with an accuracy equal to or better than in situ measurements and with a similar spatial resolution. TechnicalRemarks: Data of publication "Comparison of scanning aerosol LIDAR and in situ measurements of aerosol physical properties and boundary layer heights"

Cite this as

Zhang, Hengheng, Rolf, Christian, Tillmann, Ralf, Wesolek, Christian, Wienhold, Frank Gunther, Leisner, Thomas, Saathoff, Harald (2024). Dataset: Comparison of scanning aerosol lidar and in situ measurements of aerosol physical properties and boundary layer heights. https://doi.org/10.35097/HasgJXjeuxbkufbe

DOI retrieved: 2024

Additional Info

Field Value
Imported on November 28, 2024
Last update November 28, 2024
License CC BY-NC 4.0 Attribution-NonCommercial
Source https://doi.org/10.35097/HasgJXjeuxbkufbe
Author Zhang, Hengheng
Given Name Hengheng
Family Name Zhang
More Authors
Rolf, Christian
Tillmann, Ralf
Wesolek, Christian
Wienhold, Frank Gunther
Leisner, Thomas
Saathoff, Harald
Source Creation 2024
Publishers
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology
Production Year 2024
Publication Year 2024
Subject Areas
Name: Geological Science

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Identifier: https://publikationen.bibliothek.kit.edu/1000171129
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