experimental

Entry: MPL - showing version 3

URI: https://terra-vocabulary.org/ncl/FAIR-Incubator/earthsciencesensors/c_24ebb449

The MPL (Spinhirne et al. 1995) is a compact and eye-safe lidar system capable of determining the range of aerosols and clouds by firing a short pulse of laser light (at 523, 527, or 532 nm) and measuring the time-of-flight from pulse transmission to reception of a returned signal. The returned signal is a function of time, converted into range using the speed of light, and is proportional to the amount of light backscattered by atmospheric molecules (Rayleigh scattering), aerosols, and clouds. The evolution of the MPL from the initial Spinhirne et al. (1995) optical design to the standard design now used in MPLNET is described in detail by Campbell et al. (2002) and Welton and Campbell (2002), including on-site maintenance, and calibration techniques.

Core metadata

is a Concept | Sensor
changed on 1 Dec 2023 10:43:54.646
submitted byViqui Agazzi
accepted on 29 Sep 2022 09:14:26.226

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date accepted 29 Sep 2022 09:14:26.226
date submitted 29 Sep 2022 09:11:15.006
definition
entity MPL
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item class Sensor | Concept
label MPL
modified 1 Dec 2023 10:43:54.646
notation c_24ebb449
register earthsciencesensors
status status experimental
submitter
account name victoria.agazzi@teledetection.fr
name Viqui Agazzi

type register item
version info 3
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Definition

broader Lidar/Laser Spectrometers
definition The MPL (Spinhirne et al. 1995) is a compact and eye-safe lidar system capable of determining the range of aerosols and clouds by firing a short pulse of laser light (at 523, 527, or 532 nm) and measuring the time-of-flight from pulse transmission to reception of a returned signal. The returned signal is a function of time, converted into range using the speed of light, and is proportional to the amount of light backscattered by atmospheric molecules (Rayleigh scattering), aerosols, and clouds. The evolution of the MPL from the initial Spinhirne et al. (1995) optical design to the standard design now used in MPLNET is described in detail by Campbell et al. (2002) and Welton and Campbell (2002), including on-site maintenance, and calibration techniques.
exact match 3e1efecb 383a 734e 2d90 56f46678ce3b | 654817e8 e647 4d7b 8113 295652359e6c
label MPL
pref label MPL
type Concept | Sensor