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August 15, 2007
The HSRL technique provides a picture of a slice of the sky, highlighting atmospheric layers and components. The instrument is similar to radar. However, with lidar, radio waves are replaced with laser light. The advanced HSRL makes measurements that can even distinguish among different aerosol types and their sources. The King Air was specially equipped so that the researchers can transmit the laser out of a window in the bottom of the airplane and use a telescope to measure the amount of light that scatters back from aerosols and other atmospheric components like water droplets in clouds. During the campaign, the HSRL team adopted some new capabilities, downlinking data in real time to the ground and to the Web. "We felt that being able to broadcast our real-time data on the Web was a really important mechanism to incorporate, and it worked out well," said John Hair, co-principal investigator for HSRL. "People who weren't actually there in With their new downlinking capabilities, members of instrument team were able to share data with their field campaign collaborators while making real-time flight track decisions. These real time flight track decisions were essential in tracking plumes and in choosing flights with the best observation opportunities. This study was part of a larger campaign, the Cloud and Land Surface Interaction Campaign, or CLASIC, to investigate how changes in land use affect clouds through changes to surface heating. At the request of the CLASIC investigators, the NASA King Air also flew flight patterns coordinated with the other CLASIC aircraft so that HSRL data could be used to help understand how aerosols and clouds interact. The NASA King Air flew several flights to acquire data to validate measurements from the Cloud-Aerosol LIdar with Orthogonal Polarization instrument on board the Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO) satellite. These campaigns represent the culmination of nearly two years of preparation and coordination among the participating organizations, including NOAA, NASA, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and numerous national laboratories and universities. For more information, visit: ## Contact:
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