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Earth Observing Laboratory
Field Data Archive

LIFT96: Lidars in Flat Terrain

Summary

Three lidars were deployed at the LIFT experiment in 1996, a backscatter lidar (SABL), a Doppler lidar (HRDL), and an ozone DIAL. In addition, two ISS and three Flux-PAM stations were deployed for a companion field study, Flatland Observatory Project II. Stephen Cohn (SSSF), along with Wayne Angevine (NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory) are examining the ability of different instruments used in this study to measure the convective boundary layer height and entrainment zone thickness. Other boundary layer properties are being studied with the LIFT dataset in collaboration with Robert Banta and Christoff Senff (NOAA/NCAR Joint Optical Remote Sensing Group), including vertical velocity statistics, boundary-layer turbulence, and shallow nocturnal low-level jets. In addition, coincident profiler and lidar data are being used by Cohn and Kent Goodrich (Univ. of Colorado) to evaluate new wind profiler signal processing techniques.

Data access

Datasets from this project

Additional information

Related links

Temporal coverage

Begin Date 1996-06-15 00:00:00
End Date 1996-08-30 23:59:59

Spatial coverage


Map data from IBCSO, IBCAO, and Global Topography.

Maximum (North) Latitude: 40.00, Minimum (South) Latitude: 39.00
Minimum (West) Longitude: -89.00, Maximum (East) Longitude: -88.00

NSF

This material is based upon work supported by the NSF National Center for Atmospheric Research, a major facility sponsored by the U.S. National Science Foundation and managed by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research. Any opinions, findings and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material do not necessarily reflect the views of the U.S. National Science Foundation.