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Dive into the research topics where Gelsomina Pappalardo is active.

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Featured researches published by Gelsomina Pappalardo.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

EARLINET correlative measurements for CALIPSO: First intercomparison results

Gelsomina Pappalardo; Ulla Wandinger; Lucia Mona; Anja Hiebsch; Ina Mattis; Aldo Amodeo; Albert Ansmann; Patric Seifert; Holger Linné; Arnoud Apituley; Lucas Alados Arboledas; Dimitris Balis; Anatoli Chaikovsky; Giuseppe D'Amico; Ferdinando De Tomasi; Volker Freudenthaler; E. Giannakaki; Aldo Giunta; Ivan Grigorov; M. Iarlori; Fabio Madonna; Rodanthi-Elizabeth Mamouri; Libera Nasti; A. Papayannis; Aleksander Pietruczuk; Manuel Pujadas; V. Rizi; Francesc Rocadenbosch; Felicita Russo; Franziska Schnell

A strategy for European Aerosol Research Lidar Network (EARLINET) correlative measurements for Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO) has been developed. These EARLINET correlative measurements started in June 2006 and are still in progress. Up to now, more than 4500 correlative files are available in the EARLINET database. Independent extinction and backscatter measurements carried out at high-performance EARLINET stations have been used for a quantitative comparison with CALIPSO level 1 data. Results demonstrate the good performance of CALIPSO and the absence of evident biases in the CALIPSO raw signals. The agreement is also good for the distribution of the differences for the attenuated backscatter at 532 nm ((CALIPSO-EARLINET)/EARLINET (%)), calculated in the 1–10 km altitude range, with a mean relative difference of 4.6%, a standard deviation of 50%, and a median value of 0.6%. A major Saharan dust outbreak lasting from 26 to 31 May 2008 has been used as a case study for showing first results in terms of comparison with CALIPSO level 2 data. A statistical analysis of dust properties, in terms of intensive optical properties (lidar ratios, Angstrom exponents, and color ratios), has been performed for this observational period. We obtained typical lidar ratios of the dust event of 49 ± 10 sr and 56 ± 7 sr at 355 and 532 nm, respectively. The extinction-related and backscatter-related Angstrom exponents were on the order of 0.15–0.17, which corresponds to respective color ratios of 0.91–0.95. This dust event has been used to show the methodology used for the investigation of spatial and temporal representativeness of measurements with polar-orbiting satellites.


Applied Optics | 2004

Aerosol lidar intercomparison in the framework of the EARLINET project. 3. Raman lidar algorithm for aerosol extinction, backscatter, and lidar ratio

Gelsomina Pappalardo; Aldo Amodeo; M. Pandolfi; Ulla Wandinger; A. Ansmann; Jens Bösenberg; Volker Matthias; V. Amirdis; F. De Tomasi; M. Frioud; M. Iarlori; L. Komguem; A. Papayannis; F. Rocadenbosch; X. Wang

An intercomparison of the algorithms used to retrieve aerosol extinction and backscatter starting from Raman lidar signals has been performed by 11 groups of lidar scientists involved in the European Aerosol Research Lidar Network (EARLINET). This intercomparison is part of an extended quality assurance program performed on aerosol lidars in the EARLINET. Lidar instruments and aerosol backscatter algorithms were tested separately. The Raman lidar algorithms were tested by use of synthetic lidar data, simulated at 355, 532, 386, and 607 nm, with realistic experimental and atmospheric conditions taken into account. The intercomparison demonstrates that the data-handling procedures used by all the lidar groups provide satisfactory results. Extinction profiles show mean deviations from the correct solution within 10% in the planetary boundary layer (PBL), and backscatter profiles, retrieved by use of algorithms based on the combined Raman elastic-backscatter lidar technique, show mean deviations from solutions within 20% up to 2 km. The intercomparison was also carried out for the lidar ratio and produced profiles that show a mean deviation from the solution within 20% in the PBL. The mean value of this parameter was also calculated within a lofted aerosol layer at higher altitudes that is representative of typical layers related to special events such as Saharan dust outbreaks, forest fires, and volcanic eruptions. Here deviations were within 15%.


Applied Optics | 2004

Aerosol lidar intercomparison in the framework of the EARLINET project. 2.Aerosol backscatter algorithms

Christine Böckmann; Ulla Wandinger; A. Ansmann; Jens Bösenberg; V. Amiridis; Antonella Boselli; A. Delaval; F. De Tomasi; M. Frioud; Ivan Grigorov; A. Hagard; M. Horvat; M. Iarlori; L. Komguem; Stephan Kreipl; G. Larchevque; Volker Matthias; A. Papayannis; Gelsomina Pappalardo; F. Rocadenbosch; J. A. Rodrigues; Johannes Schneider; V. Shcherbakov; Matthias Wiegner

An intercomparison of aerosol backscatter lidar algorithms was performed in 2001 within the framework of the European Aerosol Research Lidar Network to Establish an Aerosol Climatology (EARLINET). The objective of this research was to test the correctness of the algorithms and the influence of the lidar ratio used by the various lidar teams involved in the EARLINET for calculation of backscatter-coefficient profiles from the lidar signals. The exercise consisted of processing synthetic lidar signals of various degrees of difficulty. One of these profiles contained height-dependent lidar ratios to test the vertical influence of those profiles on the various retrieval algorithms. Furthermore, a realistic incomplete overlap of laser beam and receiver field of view was introduced to remind the teams to take great care in the nearest range to the lidar. The intercomparison was performed in three stages with increasing knowledge on the input parameters. First, only the lidar signals were distributed; this is the most realistic stage. Afterward the lidar ratio profiles and the reference values at calibration height were provided. The unknown height-dependent lidar ratio had the largest influence on the retrieval, whereas the unknown reference value was of minor importance. These results show the necessity of making additional independent measurements, which can provide us with a suitable approximation of the lidar ratio. The final stage proves in general, that the data evaluation schemes of the different groups of lidar systems work well.


Environmental Research Letters | 2012

Stratospheric AOD after the 2011 eruption of Nabro volcano measured by lidars over the Northern Hemisphere

Patricia Sawamura; Jean-Paul Vernier; John E. Barnes; Timothy A. Berkoff; Ellsworth J. Welton; L. Alados-Arboledas; Francisco Navas-Guzmán; Gelsomina Pappalardo; Lucia Mona; Fabio Madonna; Diego Lange; Michaël Sicard; Sophie Godin-Beekmann; Guillaume Payen; Zifeng Wang; S. Hu; S. N. Tripathi; Carmen Córdoba-Jabonero; Raymond M. Hoff

Nabro volcano (13.37°N, 41.70°E) in Eritrea erupted on 13 June 2011 generating a layer of sulfate aerosols that persisted in the stratosphere for months. For the first time we report on ground-based lidar observations of the same event from every continent in the Northern Hemisphere, taking advantage of the synergy between global lidar networks such as EARLINET, MPLNET and NDACC with independent lidar groups and satellite CALIPSO to track the evolution of the stratospheric aerosol layer in various parts of the globe. The globally averaged aerosol optical depth (AOD) due to the stratospheric volcanic aerosol layers was of the order of 0.018 ± 0.009 at 532 nm, ranging from 0.003 to 0.04. Compared to the total column AOD from the available collocated AERONET stations, the stratospheric contribution varied from 2% to 23% at 532 nm.


Tellus B | 2009

EARLINET observations of the 14-22-May long-range dust transport event during SAMUM 2006: validation of results from dust transport modelling

D. Müller; Bernd Heinold; Matthias Tesche; Ina Tegen; Dietrich Althausen; L. Alados Arboledas; V. Amiridis; Aldo Amodeo; A. Ansmann; Dimitris Balis; Adolfo Comeron; Giuseppe D'Amico; E. Gerasopoulos; Juan Luis Guerrero-Rascado; Volker Freudenthaler; E. Giannakaki; Birgit Heese; M. Iarlori; Peter Knippertz; R. E. Mamouri; Lucia Mona; A. Papayannis; Gelsomina Pappalardo; R.M. Perrone; Gianluca Pisani; V. Rizi; Michaël Sicard; Nicola Spinelli; A. Tafuro; Matthias Wiegner

We observed a long-range transport event of mineral dust from North Africa to South Europe during the Saharan Mineral Dust Experiment (SAMUM) 2006. Geometrical and optical properties of that dust plume were determined with Sun photometer of the Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) and Raman lidar near the North African source region, and with Sun photometers of AERONET and lidars of the European Aerosol Research Lidar Network (EARLINET) in the far field in Europe. Extinction-to-backscatter ratios of the dust plume over Morocco and Southern Europe do not differ. Ångström exponents increase with distance from Morocco. We simulated the transport, and geometrical and optical properties of the dust plume with a dust transport model. The model results and the experimental data show similar times regarding the appearance of the dust plume over each EARLINET site. Dust optical depth from the model agrees in most cases to particle optical depth measured with the Sun photometers. The vertical distribution of the mineral dust could be satisfactorily reproduced, if we use as benchmark the extinction profiles measured with lidar. In some cases we find differences. We assume that insufficient vertical resolution of the dust plume in the model calculations is one reason for these deviations.


Applied Optics | 1999

Aerosol observations by lidar in the nocturnal boundary layer

Paolo Di Girolamo; Paolo F. Ambrico; Aldo Amodeo; Antonella Boselli; Gelsomina Pappalardo; Nicola Spinelli

Aerosol observations by lidar in the nocturnal boundary layer (NBL) were performed in Potenza, Southern Italy, from 20 January to 20 February 1997. Measurements during nine winter nights were considered, covering a variety of boundary-layer conditions. The vertical profiles of the aerosol backscattering coefficient at 355 and 723.37 nm were determined through a Klett-modified iterative procedure, assuming the extinction-to-backscattering ratio within the NBL has a constant value. Aerosol average size characteristics were retrieved from almost simultaneous profiles of the aerosol backscattering coefficient at 355 and 723.37 nm, the measurements being consistent with an accumulation mode radius not exceeding 0.4 microm. Similar results in terms of aerosol sizes were obtained from measurements of the extinction-to-backscattering ratio profile at 355 nm performed on six nights during the measurement campaign. Backscattering profiles at 723.37 nm were also converted into profiles of aerosol liquid water content.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2008

EAQUATE: An International Experiment For Hyperspectral Atmospheric Sounding Validation

Jonathan P. Taylor; William L. Smith; Vincenzo Cuomo; Allen M. Larar; Daniel Zhou; Carmine Serio; T. Maestri; Rolando Rizzi; Stuart M. Newman; Paolo Antonelli; Stephen A. Mango; P. Di Girolamo; Francesco Esposito; Giuseppe Grieco; Donato Summa; R. Restieri; Guido Masiello; Filomena Romano; Gelsomina Pappalardo; G. Pavese; Lucia Mona; Aldo Amodeo; Gianluca Pisani

The international experiment called the European Aqua Thermodynamic Experiment (EAQUATE) was held in September 2004 in Italy and the United Kingdom to validate Aqua satellite Atmospheric Infrared Sounder (AIRS) radiance measurements and derived products with certain groundbased and airborne systems useful for validating hyperspectral satellite sounding observations. A range of flights over land and marine surfaces were conducted to coincide with overpasses of the AIRS instrument on the Earth Observing System Aqua platform. Direct radiance evaluation of AIRS using National Polar-Orbiting Operational Environmental Satellite System (NPOESS) Airborne Sounder Testbed-Interferometer (NAST-I) and the Scanning High-Resolution Infrared Sounder has shown excellent agreement. Comparisons of level-2 retrievals of temperature and water vapor from AIRS and NAST-I validated against high-quality lidar and dropsonde data show that the 1-K/l-km and 10%/1-km requirements for temperature and water vapor (respectively) are ge...


Journal of Aerosol Science | 1995

Two wavelength lidar analysis of stratospheric aerosol size distribution

P. Di Girolamo; R.V. Gagliardi; Gelsomina Pappalardo; N. Spinelli; R. Velotta; V. Berardi

The parameters of a single-mode lognormal size distribution for stratospheric aerosol are obtained from two-wavelength lidar measurements. The method is based on the measurement of the aerosol optical thickness, τA(λ), and integrated backscattering coefficient, BI(λ), at 351 and 580 nm. The aerosol particle median radius, rm, and distribution width, σ, are obtained by comparing experimental and computed values for τA(351)BI(351), τA(580)BI(580) andBI(580)BI(351). The method has been applied to three nights of measurement (27 April 1992, 31 May 1993 and 7 March 1994) in the aftermath of the Mount Pinatubo eruption. The time lag between the eruption and the measurements suggests that the first measurement is representative of a fresh volcanic aerosol, while the second and third measurements are representative of an old and depleted aerosol. The measurements performed on 27 April 1992, 31 May 1993 and 7 March 1994 lead, respectively, to rm = 0.31 ± 0.05 μm and σ = 1.3 ± 0.1, rm = 0.16 ± 0.04 μm and σ = 1.9 ± 0.1, rm = 0.21 ± 0.06 μm and σ = 1.8 ± 0.1. The aerosol mass content and number density for the three nights of measurement have also been determined.


Remote Sensing | 2007

EARLINET correlative measurements for CALIPSO

Ina Mattis; Lucia Mona; Detlef Müller; Gelsomina Pappalardo; L. Alados-Arboledas; Giuseppe D'Amico; Aldo Amodeo; Arnoud Apituley; José María Baldasano; Christine Böckmann; Jens Bösenberg; Anatoli Chaikovsky; Adolfo Comeron; E. Giannakaki; Ivan Grigorov; Juan Luis Guerrero Rascado; Ove Gustafsson; M. Iarlori; Holger Linné; Valentin Mitev; Francisco Molero Menendez; Doina Nicolae; A. Papayannis; Carlos Pérez García-Pando; Maria Rita Perrone; Aleksander Pietruczuk; Jean-Philippe Putaud; François Ravetta; Alejandro W. Rodriguez; Patric Seifert

The European Aerosol Research Lidar Network (EARLINET) was established in 2000 to derive a comprehensive, quantitative, and statistically significant data base for the aerosol distribution on the European scale. At present, EARLINET consists of 25 stations: 16 Raman lidar stations, including 8 multi-wavelength Raman lidar stations which are used to retrieve aerosol microphysical properties. EARLINET performs a rigorous quality assurance program for instruments and evaluation algorithms. All stations measure simultaneously on a predefined schedule at three dates per week to obtain unbiased data for climatological studies. Since June 2006 the first backscatter lidar is operational aboard the CALIPSO satellite. EARLINET represents an excellent tool to validate CALIPSO lidar data on a continental scale. Aerosol extinction and lidar ratio measurements provided by the network will be particularly important for that validation. The measurement strategy of EARLINET is as follows: Measurements are performed at all stations within 80 km from the overpasses and additionally at the lidar station which is closest to the actually overpassed site. If a multi-wavelength Raman lidar station is overpassed then also the next closest 3+2 station performs a measurement. Altogether we performed more than 1000 correlative observations for CALIPSO between June 2006 and June 2007. Direct intercomparisons between CALIPSO profiles and attenuated backscatter profiles obtained by EARLINET lidars look very promising. Two measurement examples are used to discuss the potential of multi-wavelength Raman lidar observations for the validation and optimization of the CALIOP Scene Classification Algorithm. Correlative observations with multi-wavelength Raman lidars provide also the data base for a harmonization of the CALIPSO aerosol data and the data collected in future ESA lidar-in-space missions.


Applied Optics | 2012

Retrieval of aerosol extinction coefficient profiles from Raman lidar data by inversion method

Pornsarp Pornsawad; Giuseppe D'Amico; Christine Böckmann; Aldo Amodeo; Gelsomina Pappalardo

We regard the problem of differentiation occurring in the retrieval of aerosol extinction coefficient profiles from inelastic Raman lidar signals by searching for a stable solution of the resulting Volterra integral equation. An algorithm based on a projection method and iterative regularization together with the L-curve method has been performed on synthetic and measured lidar signals. A strategy to choose a suitable range for the integration within the framework of the retrieval of optical properties is proposed here for the first time to our knowledge. The Monte Carlo procedure has been adapted to treat the uncertainty in the retrieval of extinction coefficients.

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Antonella Boselli

Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare

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Fabio Madonna

National Research Council

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A. Papayannis

National Technical University of Athens

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Vincenzo Cuomo

National Research Council

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Adolfo Comeron

Polytechnic University of Catalonia

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Dimitris Balis

Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

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Arnoud Apituley

Royal Netherlands Meteorological Institute

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V. Rizi

University of L'Aquila

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Ulla Wandinger

Goddard Space Flight Center

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