Third Symposium on LIDAR Atmospheric Applications

P1.6

CALIPSO Data at the Nasa Langley Atmospheric Science Data Center

Linda A. Hunt, Atmospheric Science Data Center, Hampton, VA; and C. Trepte and M. T. Ferebee

The NASA Langley Atmospheric Science Data Center (ASDC) is the archive and distribution center for data from the Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) instrument. CALIPSO was launched into a sun-synchronous orbit on April 28, 2006, where it joined the A-Train constellation of four other Earth-orbiting satellites: Aqua, Aura, CloudSat and Parasol. The primary objective of CALIPSO's three-year mission is to make a global survey of the vertical structure of clouds and aerosols and their physical properties.

CALIPSO comprises three instruments, the Cloud-Aerosol LIdar with Orthogonal Polarization (CALIOP), the Imaging Infrared Radiometer (IIR), and the Wide Field Camera (WFC). CALIOP is a two-wavelength, polarization-sensitive lidar that provides information about the composition of clouds, the abundance and sizes of aerosols, and the altitudes of cloud and aerosol layers. The IIR measures outgoing radiation at three wavelengths in the thermal infrared window (8.65 mm, 10.6 mm, and 12.0 mm) to determine cloud emissivity and particle size. The high resolution, nadir-viewing WFC images the region around the lidar and IIR measurements in a single spectral channel (645 nm), which is matched to Band 1 of the MODIS instrument on the Aqua satellite in the A-Train, to provide context for the data from the other instruments.

CALIPSO produces Level 1 and Level 2 archived science data products. The Level 1 data include: „X lidar calibrated and geolocated profiles for the day and night portions of the orbit, with associated browse imagery „X IIR geolocated, calibrated radiances registered to a 1 km grid centered on the lidar track „X WFC geolocated radiances at 125 m and 1 km resolution for the daytime portion of each orbit Level 2 products include: „X a cloud layer product with horizontal resolutions of 1/3 km, 1 km and 5 km which includes cloud height, thickness, backscatter, extinction, ice/water phase, emissivity, and ice particle size „X an aerosol layer product at 5 km resolution which includes height, thickness, optical depth, and integrated attenuated backscatter „X an aerosol profile product with a horizontal resolution of 40 km and vertical resolution of 120 m which includes backscatter, extinction, and depolarization ratio „X IIR Level 2 cloud emissivity and particle size in 1 km pixels, with a 70 km swath width co-located to the lidar track Public release of these data is planned for the first quarter of 2007.

The ASDC provides data access, services and tools for over 35 projects in the discipline areas of Earth's radiation budget, clouds, aerosols and tropospheric chemistry. Additional information is available from the ASDC web site, http://eosweb.larc.nasa.gov

extended abstract  Extended Abstract (2.8M)

Poster Session 1, Lidar Applications In Atmospheric Studies
Wednesday, 17 January 2007, 2:30 PM-4:00 PM, Exhibit Hall C

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