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Featured researches published by John Hair.


Optics Express | 2013

Performance evaluation of a 1.6-µm methane DIAL system from ground, aircraft and UAV platforms.

Tamer F. Refaat; Syed Ismail; Amin R. Nehrir; John Hair; J. H. Crawford; Ira Leifer; Timothy Shuman

Methane is an efficient absorber of infrared radiation and a potent greenhouse gas with a warming potential 72 times greater than carbon dioxide on a per molecule basis. Development of methane active remote sensing capability using the differential absorption lidar (DIAL) technique enables scientific assessments of the gas emission and impacts on the climate. A performance evaluation of a pulsed DIAL system for monitoring atmospheric methane is presented. This system leverages a robust injection-seeded pulsed Nd:YAG pumped Optical Parametric Oscillator (OPO) laser technology operating in the 1.645 µm spectral band. The system also leverages an efficient low noise, commercially available, InGaAs avalanche photo-detector (APD). Lidar signals and error budget are analyzed for system operation on ground in the range-resolved DIAL mode and from airborne platforms in the integrated path DIAL (IPDA) mode. Results indicate system capability of measuring methane concentration profiles with <1.0% total error up to 4.5 km range with 5 minute averaging from ground. For airborne IPDA, the total error in the column dry mixing ratio is less than 0.3% with 0.1 sec average using ground returns. This system has a unique capability of combining signals from the atmospheric scattering from layers above the surface with ground return signals, which provides methane column measurement between the atmospheric scattering layer and the ground directly. In such case 0.5% and 1.2% total errors are achieved with 10 sec average from airborne platforms at 8 km and 15.24 km altitudes, respectively. Due to the pulsed nature of the transmitter, the system is relatively insensitive to aerosol and cloud interferences. Such DIAL system would be ideal for investigating high latitude methane releases over polar ice sheets, permafrost regions, wetlands, and over ocean during day and night. This system would have commercial potential for fossil fuel leaks detection and industrial monitoring applications.


Remote Sensing of Clouds and the Atmosphere XVI | 2011

Remote sensing of aerosol properties during CARES

Evgueni I. Kassianov; James C. Barnard; Mikhail S. Pekour; Connor J. Flynn; Richard A. Ferrare; Chris A. Hostetler; John Hair; B. T. Jobson

One month of MFRSR data collected at two sites in the central California (USA) region during the CARES campaign are processed and the MFRSR-derived AODs at 500 nm wavelength are compared with available AODs provided by AERONET measurements. We find that the MFRSR and AERONET AODs are small (~0.05) and comparable. A reasonable quantitative agreement between column aerosol size distributions (up to 2 μm) from the MFRSR and AERONET retrievals is illustrated as well. Analysis of the retrieved (MFRSR and AERONET) and in situ measured aerosol size distributions suggests that the contribution of the coarse mode to aerosol optical properties is substantial for several days. The results of a radiative closure experiment performed for the two sites and one-month period show a favorable agreement between the calculated and measured broadband downwelling irradiances (bias does not exceed about 3 Wm-2), and thus imply that the MFRSR-derived aerosol optical properties are reasonable.


Remote Sensing of Clouds and the Atmosphere XVII; and Lidar Technologies, Techniques, and Measurements for Atmospheric Remote Sensing VIII | 2012

Multi-year satellite and surface observations of AOD in support of two-column aerosol project (TCAP) field campaign

Evgueni I. Kassianov; Duli Chand; Larry K. Berg; Jerome D. Fast; Jason M. Tomlinson; Richard A. Ferrare; Chris A. Hostetler; John Hair

We use combined multi-year measurements from the surface and space for assessing the spatial and temporal distribution of aerosol properties within a large (~400x400 km) region centered on Cape Cod, Massachusetts, along the East Coast of the United States. The ground-based Aerosol Robotic Network (AERONET) measurements at Martha’s Vineyard Coastal Observatory (MVCO) site and Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectrometer (MODIS) sensors on board the Terra and Aqua satellites provide horizontal and temporal variations of aerosol optical depth, while the Cloud- Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observations (CALIPSO) offers the altitudes of aerosol-layers. The combined ground-based and satellite measurements indicated several interesting features among which were the large differences in the aerosol properties observed in July and February. We applied the climatology of aerosol properties for designing the Two-Column Aerosol Project (TCAP), which is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE’s) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program. The TCAP field campaign involves 12-month deployment (started July 1, 2012) of the ground-based ARM Mobile Facility (AMF) and Mobile Aerosol Observing System (MAOS) on Cape Cod and complimentary aerosol observations from two research aircraft: the DOE Gulfstream-1 (G-1) and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) B200 King Air. Using results from the coordinated G-1 and B200 flights during the recent (July, 2012) Intensive Observation Period, we demonstrated that the G-1 in situ measurements and B200 active remote sensing can provide complementary information on the temporal and spatial changes of the aerosol properties off the coast of North America.


Fourth International Asia-Pacific Environmental Remote Sensing Symposium 2004: Remote Sensing of the Atmosphere, Ocean, Environment, and Space | 2004

Combined active-passive remote sensing of aerosol optical properties

Michael C. Pitts; Chris A. Hostetler; John Hair; Rich Ferrare; Jeng-Hwa Yee

Recent assessments of global climate change conclude that the radiative effect of aerosols is one of the largest uncertainties in our ability to predict future climate change. A myriad of new sensors and satellite missions are being designed to address this major question confronting credible prediction of climate change. The NASA Langley Airborne A-Band Spectrometer (LAABS) is a recently developed aircraft instrument that provides high spectral resolution (~0.03 nm) radiance measurements of reflected sunlight over the oxygen A-band spectral region centered near 765 nm. High resolution O2 A-band spectrometry of reflected sunlight is a promising new approach for remote sensing of aerosol and cloud optical properties. While the LAABS instrument provides valuable data on a stand-alone basis, greater scientific return may be realized by combining the A-band spectra with coincident lidar measurements that supply additional information on the vertical distribution of the aerosol. In particular, an instrument suite that combines LAABS with the new airborne High Spectral Resolution Lidar (HSRL) has the potential to provide a comprehensive suite of aerosol and cloud optical property measurements never before achieved. In this paper, we investigate the combined use of LAABS and HSRL measurements to infer aerosol single scatter albedo. We explore the information content of the O2 A-band reflectance spectra and, in particular, the advantages offered by high resolution A-band spectrometers such as LAABS. The approach for combined LAABS/HSRL retrievals is described and results from simulation studies are presented to illustrate their potential for retrieval of single scatter albedo.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2013

Airborne observations of aerosol extinction by in situ and remote‐sensing techniques: Evaluation of particle hygroscopicity

Luke D. Ziemba; K. Lee Thornhill; Rich Ferrare; J. Barrick; A. J. Beyersdorf; G. Chen; S. Crumeyrolle; John Hair; Chris A. Hostetler; C. H. Hudgins; Michael D. Obland; R. R. Rogers; Amy Jo Scarino; Edward L. Winstead; Bruce E. Anderson


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2014

Airborne Multiwavelength High Spectral Resolution Lidar (HSRL-2) observations during TCAP 2012: vertical profiles of optical and microphysical properties of a smoke/urban haze plume over the northeastern coast of the US

Detlef Müller; Chris A. Hostetler; Richard A. Ferrare; Sharon Burton; Eduard Chemyakin; Alexei Kolgotin; John Hair; A. L. Cook; D. B. Harper; R. R. Rogers; Rich Hare; Craig S. Cleckner; Michael D. Obland; Jason M. Tomlinson; Larry K. Berg; Beat Schmid


Geophysical Research Letters | 2013

Space‐based lidar measurements of global ocean carbon stocks

Michael J. Behrenfeld; Yongxiang Hu; Chris A. Hostetler; Giorgio Dall'Olmo; Sharon Rodier; John Hair; Charles R. Trepte


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013

Comparison of mixed layer heights from airborne high spectral resolution lidar, ground-based measurements, and the WRF-Chem model during CalNex and CARES

Amy Jo Scarino; Michael D. Obland; Jerome D. Fast; Sharon Burton; Richard A. Ferrare; Chris A. Hostetler; Larry K. Berg; Barry Lefer; Christine Haman; John Hair; Ray Rogers; Carolyn F. Butler; A. L. Cook; D. B. Harper


Remote Sensing of Environment | 2012

Polarimetric retrievals of surface and cirrus clouds properties in the region affected by the Deepwater Horizon oil spill

Matteo Ottaviani; Brian Cairns; Jacek Chowdhary; Bastiaan van Diedenhoven; Kirk Knobelspiesse; Chris A. Hostetler; Rich Ferrare; Sharon Burton; John Hair; Michael D. Obland; R. R. Rogers


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2013

Hyperspectral aerosol optical depths from TCAP flights

Yohei Shinozuka; Roy R. Johnson; Connor J. Flynn; P. B. Russell; Beat Schmid; J. Redemann; Stephen E. Dunagan; Celine D. Kluzek; John M. Hubbe; Michal Segal-Rosenheimer; J. M. Livingston; T. F. Eck; Richard Wagener; Laurie Gregory; Duli Chand; Larry K. Berg; Ray Rogers; Richard A. Ferrare; John Hair; Chris A. Hostetler; Sharon Burton

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Carolyn F. Butler

Science Applications International Corporation

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Anthony Notari

Science Applications International Corporation

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