• Title/Summary/Keyword: lidar ratio

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Study of a Method for Measuring Hydrogen Gas Concentration Using a Photon-counting Raman Lidar System (광 계수 방식의 라만 라이다 시스템을 이용한 원격 수소 가스 농도 계측 방법에 대한 연구)

  • Choi, In Young;Baik, Sung Hoon;Cha, Jung Ho;Kim, Jin Ho
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.30 no.3
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    • pp.114-119
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    • 2019
  • This paper discusses the development of a Raman lidar system for remote detection and measurement of hydrogen gas by using a photon counter. The Raman signal of the hydrogen gas is very weak and has a very low signal-to-noise ratio. The photon counter has the advantage of improving the signal-to-noise ratio, because it has a discriminator to eliminate the background noise from the Raman signal of the hydrogen gas. Therefore, a small and portable Raman lidar system was developed using a low-power pulsed laser and a photon-counter system to measure the hydrogen gas concentration remotely. To verify the capability of measuring hydrogen gas using the developed photon-counting Raman lidar system, experiments were carried out using a gas chamber in which it is possible to adjust the hydrogen gas concentration. As a result, our photon-counting Raman lidar system is seen to measure a minimum concentration of 0.65 vol.% hydrogen gas at a distance of 10 m.

Lidar Measurement of Optical Properties of Cirrus Clouds at Kwangju, Korea

  • Noh, Y.M.;Choi, S.C.;Kim, Y.J.
    • Proceedings of the KSRS Conference
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    • 2003.11a
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    • pp.959-961
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    • 2003
  • Cirrus clouds observation was conducted using a lidar system in order to measure their height, thickness and optical depth at Kwangju (35$^{\circ}$10'N, 126$^{\circ}$53'), Korea in winter, December 2002, and spring March and April 2003. Cirrus clouds at high altitude can be distinguished from atmospheric aerosols location by high depolarization ratio and high altitude. Cirrus clouds were observed at 5${\sim}$12km altitudes with a high depolarization ratio from 0.2 to 0.5. Optical depth of cirrus clouds had varied from 0.28 to 1.81. Radiative effect of observed cirrus cloud on climate system was estimated to be negative net flux from ?0.24 to ?31.04 W/m$^{2}$.

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Generation of High-Resolution Precise DEMs Through Airborne LIDAR Surveys on Huge Antarctic Regions

  • Lee Imp-yeong;CHOI Yun-soo;Lee, Jae-one
    • Korean Journal of Geomatics
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    • v.3 no.2
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    • pp.115-122
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    • 2004
  • NASA, NSF and USGS jointly conducted airborne LIDAR surveys to acquire numerous surface points with high densities over the Antarctic Dry Valleys and its vicinity, The huge set of these points retains two characteristics undesirable for DEM generation, which are unusually high blunder ratio and large variation of the local point densities. Hence, in order to not only reduce the undesirable effects due to these characteristics but also process the huge number of points within reasonable limits of time and resources, we developed an efficient, robust, nearly automatic approach to DEM generation. This paper reports about the application of this approach to generating high-resolution precise DEMs from the Antarctic LIDAR surveys and the evaluation of their accuracy.

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Retrieval of Depolarization ratio using Sunphotometer data and Comparison with LIDAR Depolarization ratio (대기 에어로졸 고도 분포와 선포토미터 편광소멸도와의 연관성 연구)

  • Lee, Kyunghwa;Kim, Kwanchul;Noh, Youngmin
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.32 no.2
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    • pp.133-139
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    • 2016
  • Particle depolarization ratios (DPRs) at 440, 675, 870 and 1020 nm are retrieved from AERONET sun/sky radiometer observations at Gosan and Kongju in South Korea. The retrieved results show good agreement with DPRs measured by lidar at 532 nm. High DPRs are found when Asian dust passes through at the upper atmosphere over 2 km above the Earth's surface. In case of lower atmosphere less than 2 km from the ground, DPRs are relatively low due to the small amount of dust particles and mixing of dust with air pollutants.

Mutual Interference on Mobile Pulsed Scanning LIDAR

  • Kim, Gunzung;Eom, Jeongsook;Choi, Jeonghee;Park, Yongwan
    • IEMEK Journal of Embedded Systems and Applications
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    • v.12 no.1
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    • pp.43-62
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    • 2017
  • Mobile pulse scanning Light Detection And Ranging (LIDAR) are essential components of intelligent vehicles capable of autonomous travel. Obstacle detection functions of autonomous vehicles require very low failure rates. With the increasing number of autonomous vehicles equipped with scanning LIDARs to detect and avoid obstacles and navigate safely through the environment, the probability of mutual interference becomes an important issue. The reception of foreign laser pulses can lead to problems such as ghost targets or a reduced signal-to-noise ratio. This paper will show the probability that any two scanning LIDARs will interfere mutually by considering spatial and temporal overlaps. We have conducted four experiments to investigate the occurrence of the mutual interference between scanning LIDARs. These four experimental results introduced the effects of mutual interference and indicated that the interference has spatial and temporal locality. It is hard to ignore consecutive mutual interference on the same line or the same angle because it is possible the real object not noise or error. It may make serious faults because the obstacle detection functions of autonomous vehicle rely on heavily the scanning LIDAR.

An Ultra-narrow Bandwidth Filter for Daytime Wind Measurement of Direct Detection Rayleigh Lidar

  • Han, Fei;Liu, Hengjia;Sun, Dongsong;Han, Yuli;Zhou, Anran;Zhang, Nannan;Chu, Jiaqi;Zheng, Jun;Jiang, Shan;Wang, Yuanzu
    • Current Optics and Photonics
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    • v.4 no.1
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    • pp.69-80
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    • 2020
  • A Rayleigh Lidar used for wind detection works by transmitting laser pulses to the atmosphere and receiving backscattering signals from molecules. Because of the weak backscattering signals, a lidar usually uses a high sensitivity photomultiplier as detector and photon counting technology for signal collection. The capturing of returned extremely weak backscattering signals requires the lidar to work on dark background with a long time accumulation to get high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR). Because of the strong solar background during the day, the SNR of lidar during daytime is much lower than that during nighttime, the altitude and accuracy of detection are also restricted greatly. Therefore this article describes an ultra-narrow bandwidth filter (UNBF) that has been developed on 354.7 nm wavelength of laser. The UNBF is used for suppressing the strong solar background that degrades the performance of Rayleigh wind lidar during daytime. The optical structure of UNBF consists of an interference filter (IF), a low resolution Fabry-Perot interferometer (FPI) and a high resolution FPI. The parameters of each optical component of the UNBF are presented in this article. The transmission curve of the aligned UNBF is measured with a tunable laser. Contrasting the result of with-UNBF and with-IF shows that the solar background received by a Licel transient recorder decreases by 50~100 times and that the SNR with-UNBF was improved by 3 times in the altitude range (35 km to 40 km) compared to with-IF at 10:26 to 10:38 on August 29, 2018. By the SNR comparison at four different times of one day, the ratio-values are larger than 1 over the altitude range (25~50 km) in general, the results illustrate that the SNR with-UNBF is better than that with-IF for Rayleigh Lidar during daytime and they demonstrate the effective improvements of solar background restriction of UNBF.

Development of Raman LIDAR System to Measure Vertical Water Vapor Profiles and Comparision of Raman LIDAR with GNSS and MWR Systems (수증기의 연직 분포 측정을 위한 라만 라이다 장치의 개발 및 GNSS, MWR 장비와 상호 비교연구)

  • Park, Sun-Ho;Kim, Duk-Hyeon;Kim, Yong-Gi;Yun, Mun-Sang;Cheong, Hai-Du
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.22 no.6
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    • pp.283-290
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    • 2011
  • A Raman LIDAR system has been designed and constructed for quantitative measurement of water vapor mixing ratio. The comparison with commercial microwave radiometer and global navigation satellite system(GNSS) was performed for the precipitable water vapor(PWV) profile and total PWV. The result shows that the total GNSS-PWV and LIDAR-PWV have good correlation with each other. But, there is small difference between the two methods because of maximum measurement height in LIDAR and the GNSS method. There are some significant differences between Raman and MWR when the water vapor concentration changes quickly near the boundary layer or at the edge of a cloud. Finally we have decided that MWR cannot detect spatial changes but LIDAR can measure spatial changes.

Numerical Modeling of a Short-range Three-dimensional Flash LIDAR System Operating in a Scattering Atmosphere Based on the Monte Carlo Radiative Transfer Matrix Method (몬테 카를로 복사 전달 행렬 방법을 사용한 산란 대기에서 동작하는 단거리 3차원 플래시 라이다 시스템의 수치적 모델링)

  • An, Haechan;Na, Jeongkyun;Jeong, Yoonchan
    • Korean Journal of Optics and Photonics
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    • v.31 no.2
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    • pp.59-70
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    • 2020
  • We discuss a modified numerical model based on the Monte Carlo radiative transfer (MCRT) method, i.e., the MCRT matrix method, for the analysis of atmospheric scattering effects in three-dimensional flash LIDAR systems. Based on the MCRT method, the radiative transfer function for a LIDAR signal is constructed in a form of a matrix, which corresponds to the characteristic response. Exploiting the superposition and convolution of the characteristic response matrices under the paraxial approximation, an extended computer simulation model of an overall flash LIDAR system is developed. The MCRT matrix method substantially reduces the number of tracking signals, which may grow excessively in the case of conventional Monte Carlo methods. Consequently, it can readily yield fast acquisition of the signal response under various scattering conditions and LIDAR-system configurations. Using the computational model based on the MCRT matrix method, we carry out numerical simulations of a three-dimensional flash LIDAR system operating under different atmospheric conditions, varying the scattering coefficient in terms of visible distance. We numerically analyze various phenomena caused by scattering effects in this system, such as degradation of the signal-to-noise ratio, glitches, and spatiotemporal spread and time delay of the LIDAR signals. The MCRT matrix method is expected to be very effective in analyzing a variety of LIDAR systems, including flash LIDAR systems for autonomous driving.

Instantaneous Monitoring of Pollen Distribution in the Atmosphere by Surface-based Lidar (지상 라이다를 이용한 대기중 꽃가루 분포 실시간 모니터링)

  • Noh, Young-Min;Mueller, Detlef;Lee, Kwon-Ho;Choi, Young-Jean;Kim, Kyu-Rang;Lee, Han-Lim;Choi, Tae-Jin
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.28 no.1
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    • pp.1-9
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    • 2012
  • The diurnal variation in pollen vertical distributions in the atmosphere was observed by a surface-based lidar remote sensing technique. Aerosol extinction coefficient and depolarization ratio at 532 nm were obtained from lidar measurements in spring ($4^{th}$ May - $2^{nd}$ June) 2009 at Gwangju Institute of Science & Technology (GIST) located in Gwangju, Korea ($35.15^{\circ}E$, $126.53^{\circ}N$). Unusual variations of depolarization ratio were observed for six days from $4^{th}$ to $9^{th}$ May. Depolarization ratios varied from 0.08 to 0.14 were detected at the low altitude in the morning. The altitude with those high depolarization ratios was increased up to 1.5 - 2.0 km at the time interval between 12:00 and 14:00 LT and then decreased. The temporal variations in high values of depolarization ratios from lidar measurements show good agreement in patterns with the sampled pollen concentrations measured using the Burkard trap sampler. This study demonstrates that the pollen distribution data obtained by lidar measurements can be a useful tool for investigating spatial and temporal characteristic of pollen particles.

Ambient CO2 Measurement Using Raman Lidar (라만 라이다를 이용한 대기 중 이산화탄소 혼합비 측정)

  • Kim, Daewon;Lee, Hanlim;Park, Junsung;Choi, Wonei;Yang, Jiwon;Kang, Hyeongwoo
    • Korean Journal of Remote Sensing
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    • v.35 no.6_3
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    • pp.1187-1195
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    • 2019
  • We, for the first time, developed a Raman lidar system which can remotely detect surface CO2 volume mixing ratio (VMR). The Raman lidar system consists of the Nd: YAG laser of wavelength 355 nm with 80 mJ, an optical receiver, and detectors. Indoor CO2 cell measurements show that the accuracy of the Raman lidar system is calculated to be 99.89%. We carried out the field measurement using our Raman lidar at Pukyong National University over a seven-day period in October 2019. The results show good agreement between CO2 VMRs measured by the Raman lidar (CO2 Raman Lidar) and those measured by in situ instruments (CO2 In situ) which located 300 m and 350 m away from the Raman lidar system. The correlation coefficient (R), mean absolute error (MAE), and root mean square error (RMSE) between CO2 In situ and CO2 Raman Lidar are 0.67, 2.78 ppm, and 3.26 ppm, respectively.