Document Type
Article
Journal/Book Title/Conference
Proceedings of SPIE
Volume
7824
Publisher
SPIE
Publication Date
2010
Abstract
Use of ground based remote sensing technologies such as scanning lidar systems (light detection and ranging) has gained traction in characterizing ambient aerosols due to some key advantages such as wide area of regard (10 km2 ), fast response time, high spatial resolution (m) and high sensitivity. Energy Dynamics Laboratory and Utah State University, in conjunction with the USDA-ARS, has developed a three-wavelength scanning lidar system called Aglite that has been successfully deployed to characterize particle motion, concentration, and size distribution at both point and diffuse area sources in agricultural and industrial settings. A suite of massbased and size distribution point sensors are used to locally calibrate the lidar. Generating meaningful particle size distribution, mass concentration, and emission rate results based on lidar data is dependent on strategic onsite deployment of these point sensors with successful local meteorological measurements. Deployment strategies learned from field use of this entire measurement system over five years include the characterization of local meteorology and its predictability prior to deployment, the placement of point sensors to prevent contamination and overloading, the positioning of the lidar and beam plane to avoid hard target interferences, and the usefulness of photographic and written observational data.
Recommended Citation
Wojcik, Michael D.; Moore, Kori D.; Martin, Randy S.; and Hatfield, Jerry, "Strategies for Lidar Characterization of Particulates from Point and Area Sources" (2010). Civil and Environmental Engineering Faculty Publications. Paper 3365.
https://digitalcommons.usu.edu/cee_facpub/3365
Comments
SPIE © 1962 - 2016. All Rights Reserved. Publishers version can be found here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.865079