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Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) Stations

Background

Although the ground air quality monitoring network can tell us the characteristics of air close to the ground or in a region, it cannot explain how particulate matter (also know as aerosol) are distributed vertically. Therefore, optical remote sensing technology is applied to monitor optical characteristics of aerosol vertically on a long-term and continuous basis. It provides a strong and powerful vertical profile of pollutants as they change over time.

Light detection and ranging (Lidar) is one of the most widely applied optical remote sensing technology for aerosol now. Developed by Stanford University, Lidar was inspired by the concept of meteorological radar. Emulating radar, Lidar emits directional electromagnetic wave into the atmosphere from a fixed point and receives echo signals, by which we can calculate the position, height, and optical characteristics of the object. The first Lidar was born in the lab in 1953, applying ruby crystal as its excitation source and was capable of emitting a 50-kilowatt giant-pulse laser at one time, with optical band at 1064 nano-meter. It was applied to atmospheric observation for the first time in 1964, and in 1967, its application further expanded to atmospheric pollutant monitoring, and has since embarked on a long journey of technical upgrade and evolution. Today, Lidar, very different from what it was, is now applied extensively to all kinds of environmental monitoring tasks, including vertical monitoring and study of aerosol, cloud, O3 and trace gas. It can even be applied to analysis of all kinds of weather phenomenons, such as large-scale front systems, hurricanes, mountain-valley breezes, and the boundary layer, as well as upper atmosphere such as ozone and ice-crystal cloud in the stratosphere.

Evolution of the monitoring station

The US NASA initiated the concept of applying the Lidar to monitor the vertical profile of atmospheric pollutants in the 1990s. In 1993, Goddard Space Flight Center developed the 1st generation of elastic scattering Lidar, which prioritized fully-automated operation and continuous monitoring, and at the same time ensured that the instrument was safe, easy to operate and could run stably. The MOENV introduced the US NASA Lidar technology to monitor the features of aerosol in the air of Zhongli in 2002, and the result was very fruitful. The MOENV started to consider establishing a Lidar background monitoring station in 2005, and installed a set of micro-pulse Lidar (MPL) at the NCU, Zhongli.

The Lidar station attained to rich results from 2005 to 2015. Therefore, the MOENV procured a total of 3 MPL systems of a newer generation from Sigma in 2015 and 2016 to upgrade instruments at the Lidar station in Zhongli. In addition, 2 mobile MPL stations were installed to fully fulfill the MOENV's needs in air pollution monitoring.

Light Detection and Ranging (LIDAR) Station
【MOENV LIDAR station】

Data of LIDAR stations

Please select a monitoring station and a date:

2018/10/3 MPLNET Data