Lidar measurements using large liquid mirror telescopes

Mathematics – Probability

Scientific paper

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Apertures, Form Factors, Lower Atmosphere, Optical Radar, Photons, Radar Measurement, Telescopes, Transmitter Receivers, Rayleigh Scattering, Resonance Scattering, Scale Height, Spatial Resolution, Temporal Resolution

Scientific paper

It is a well accepted practice in the discussion of lidars to compare systems by a performance factor given by the product of the transmitter power and receiver aperture. This form of the performance factor reflects the two key parameters that determine the amount of photons recorded from a given range bin; the amount of transmitted photons and the probability of collecting a scattered photon. We are interested in studying the propagation and breaking of gravity waves typically generated in the lower atmosphere. To study these waves requires high temporal and spatial resolution, as they have frequencies as high as 500 mHz and generate turbulent structures with vertical scales of less than 25 m. In the 80 - 100 km region of the atmosphere these measurements are most efficiently obtained by using resonance scattering from sodium atoms deposited by meteors. However, in the 30 - 80 km region, the most efficient scattering arises from molecules (Rayleigh scattering). Since the atmospheric scale height is nominally 7 km, this scattering becomes extremely weak above 60 km. Furthermore, present laser technology limits the power available for Rayleigh-scattering experiments to about 0.5 - 50 W. The transmitter for the lidar system under development at the University of Western Ontario uses a two-beam transmitter to simultaneously measure density perturbations and temperature from both Rayleigh and resonance scattering.

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