We use cookies to give you the best experience and to help improve our website
Find out what cookies we use and how to disable themThis Standard describes the determination of height-resolved profiles of atmospheric backscattering by means of active optical sounding.The measurements allow the following properties of the atmosphere up to several kilometres above ground to be derived:
•Cloud bases
• Upper boundaries of optically thin clouds
• Upper and lower boundaries and internal structures of particle layers:
– The height of thermal structures, e.g. inversions
– Boundary layer height, mixing layer¬ height (under suitable conditions)
• Backscatter coefficients of the particles
• Extinction coefficient (requires further assumptions).
The Standard goes on to discuss the depolarisation lidar and the use of multi-wavelength systems.
This allows further parameters to be determined:
• Particle size classification (Ångström expo¬nent, colour ratio)
• Shape classification (linear depolarisation degree)
The following fields of application are particularly important:
• Air quality monitoring (vertical structure of the boundary layer)
• Aviation safety (cloud base)
• Particle content and transport (e.g. volcanic dust)
• Weather forecasting and climate modelling (e.g. atmospheric boundary layer, cloud ¬base)
• Satellite remote sensing (validation)
Examples that illustrate these applications are discussed in Section 11. This Standard does not describe extended lidar techniques that capture the following effects quantitatively: inelastic scattering effects (Raman scattering), Doppler shift, multiple scattering, modulation techniques and spectral separation of molecular and particle backscattering (HSRL = high spectral resolution lidar). Some of these extended techniques have already been or will be described in other parts of the ISO 28902 series. This Standard does not deal with the special features of aircraft-borne or satellite-aided systems nor those of scanning systems.
Routine quantitative measurements of meteorological parameters (see above) are important for the observations of weather and/or air quality. The development of the proposed standard is very relevant, given the fact that backscatter lidar systems are increasingly being used as a tool for the above mentioned parameters. Furthermore, WMO is very much in need and in favor of elaborating a standard on backscatter lidar.
You are now following this standard. Weekly digest emails will be sent to update you on the following activities:
You can manage your follow preferences from your Account. Please check your mailbox junk folder if you don't receive the weekly email.
You have successfully unsubscribed from weekly updates for this standard.
Comment on proposal
Required form fields are indicated by an asterisk (*) character.