Combined Ocean and Atmospheric Lidar Profile Results during the Ship-Aircraft Bio-Optical Experiment.

Johnathan W Hair1, Chris A Hostetler1, Yongxiang Hu1, Michael Behrenfeld2, Carolyn F Butler3, David B Harper1, Richard J Hare1, Timothy Berkoff1, Anthony L Cook1, James E Collins Jr1, Nicole Stockley4, Michael Twardowski5, Ivona Cetinic6, Richard Anthony Ferrare1 and Terry L Mack7, (1)NASA Langley Research Center, Hampton, VA, United States, (2)Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, United States, (3)Science Systems and Applications, Inc. Hampton, Hampton, VA, United States, (4)Harbor Branch Oceanographic Institute, Ft. Pierce, FL, United States, (5)Western Environmental Technologies, Philomath, OR, United States, (6)NASA Goddard Space Flight Cent, Greenbelt, MD, United States, (7)Analytical Mechanics Associates, Inc., Hampton, VA, United States
Abstract:
First of its kind combined atmospheric and ocean profile data were collected by the recently upgraded NASA Langley Research Center’s (LaRC) High Spectral Resolution Lidar (HSRL-1) during the 17 July – 7 August 2014 Ship-Aircraft Bio-Optical Research Experiment (SABOR). This mission sampled over a region that covered the Gulf of Maine, open-ocean near Bermuda, and coastal waters from Virginia to Rhode Island. The HSRL-1 and the Research Scanning Polarimeter from NASA Goddard Institute for Space Studies collected data onboard the NASA LaRC King Air aircraft and flight operations were closely coordinated with the Research Vessel Endeavor that made in situ ocean optical and biological measurements. The lidar measurements provided profiles of atmospheric backscatter and particulate depolarization at 532nm, 1064nm, and extinction (532nm) from approximately 9km altitude. In addition, for the first time HSRL subsurface ocean backscatter, depolarization, and diffuse attenuation data at 532nm were collected and compared to both the ship measurements and the Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (NASA MODIS-Aqua) satellite ocean retrievals. This presentation will include an overview of the instrument and measurement methodology, show examples from the campaign, and provide preliminary comparisons with the in situ optics and satellite retrievals.