Publications by authors named "James B Abshire"

During the summer 2017 ASCENDS/ABoVE airborne science campaign, the NASA Goddard CO Sounder lidar overflew smoke plumes from wildfires in the British Columbia, Canada. In the flight path over Vancouver Island on 8 August 2017, the column XCO retrievals from the lidar measurements at flight altitudes around 9 km showed an average enhancement of 4 ppm from the wildfires. A comparison of these enhancements with those from the Goddard Global Chemistry Transport model suggested that the modeled CO emissions from wildfires were underestimated by more than a factor of 2.

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We report the development of a new type of space lidar specifically designed for missions to small planetary bodies for both topographic mapping and support of sample collection or landing. The instrument is designed to have a wide dynamic range with several operation modes for different mission phases. The laser transmitter consists of a fiber laser that is intensity modulated with a return-to-zero pseudo-noise (RZPN) code.

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Article Synopsis
  • NASA's ICESat, operational from 2003 to 2009, was the first satellite to provide global lidar measurements of ice sheet elevations, sea-ice thickness, and vegetation structure.
  • The Geoscience Laser Altimeter System (GLAS), ICESat's main instrument, determined distances using laser pulses but faced issues with signal distortion due to a wider-than-expected range of peak power from surfaces like snow and ice.
  • A solution was developed to correct this "saturation range bias" through laboratory tests and comparisons with GPS data, which effectively reduced errors in elevation measurements, especially in regions like Bolivia and Antarctica.
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  • The study describes the performance of HgCdTe avalanche photodiode (APD) arrays for lidar applications in the infrared range, highlighting excellent quantum efficiencies above 90% and significant APD gains exceeding 600.
  • It also emphasizes the detectors' low noise levels (less than 0.5 fW/Hz NEP), broad bandwidth (6-10 MHz), and capability to deliver a linear analog output with a wide dynamic range, achieving up to 5 orders of magnitude by adjusting the APD gain.
  • These advanced detectors have been effectively tested in airborne lidar systems for measuring carbon monoxide and methane, and show potential for future space lidar missions.
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We report on airborne CO(2) column absorption measurements made in 2009 with a pulsed direct-detection lidar operating at 1572.33 nm and utilizing the integrated path differential absorption technique. We demonstrated these at different altitudes from an aircraft in July and August in flights over four locations in the central and eastern United States.

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We report airborne measurements of the column abundance of atmospheric methane made over an altitude range of 3-11 km using a direct detection integrated-path differential-absorption lidar with a pulsed laser emitting at 1651 nm. The laser transmitter was a tunable, seeded optical parametric amplifier pumped by a Nd:YAG laser, and the receiver used a photomultiplier detector and photon-counting electronics. The results follow the expected changes with aircraft altitude, and the measured line shapes and optical depths show good agreement with theoretical calculations.

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We use theoretical models to compare the receiver signal to noise ratio (SNR) vs. average rate of detected signal photons for an integrated path differential absorption (IPDA) lidar using coherent detection with continuous wave (CW) lasers and direct detection with sine-wave and pulse modulations. The results show the coherent IPDA lidar has high receiver gain and narrow bandwidth to overcome the effects of detector circuit noise and background light, but the actual receiver performance can be limited by the coherent mixing efficiency, speckle and other factors.

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We demonstrate a wavelength-locked laser source that rapidly steps through six wavelengths distributed across a 1572.335 nm carbon dioxide (CO(2)) absorption line to allow precise measurements of atmospheric CO(2) absorption. A distributed-feedback laser diode (DFB-LD) was frequency-locked to the CO(2) line center by using a frequency modulation technique, limiting its peak-to-peak frequency drift to 0.

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A technique was developed to compute the radiance of the scene viewed by the optical receiver of the Mars Orbiter Laser Altimeter. The technique used the detection threshold and the false detection rate of the receiver to provide a passive radiometry measurement of Mars at the 1064 nm wavelength over a 2 nm bandwidth and subkilometer spatial resolution in addition to the altimetry and active radiometry measurements. The passive radiometry measurement is shown to have a 2% or better precision and has been stable over several Martian years.

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The design and preliminary tests of an automated differential absorption lidar (DIAL) that profiles water vapor in the lower troposphere are presented. The instrument, named CODI (for compact DIAL), has been developed to be eye safe, low cost, weatherproof, and portable. The lidar design and its unattended operation are described.

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