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Featured researches published by Keith Evans.


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 1995

A Comparison of Water Vapor Measurements Made by Raman Lidar and Radiosondes

Richard A. Ferrare; S. H. Melfi; David N. Whiteman; Keith Evans; F. J. Schmidlin; D. O'c. Starr

Abstract This paper examines the calibration characteristics of the NASA/GSFC Raman water vapor lidar during three field experiments that occurred between 1991 and 1993. The lidar water vapor profiles are calibrated using relative humidity profiles measured by AIR and Vaisala radiosondes. The lidar calibration computed using the AIR radiosonde, which uses a carbon hygristor to measure relative humidity, was 3%–5% higher than that computed using the Vaisala radiosonde, which uses a thin film capacitive element. These systematic differences were obtained for relative humidities above 30% and so cannot be explained by the known poor low relative humidity measurements associated with the carbon hygristor. The lidar calibration coefficient was found to vary by less than 1% over this period when determined using the Vaisala humidity data and by less than 5% when using the AIR humidity data. The differences between the lidar relative humidity profiles and those measured by these radiosondes are also examined. Th...


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2006

Raman Lidar Measurements during the International H2O Project. Part I: Instrumentation and Analysis Techniques

David N. Whiteman; Belay Berhane Demoz; K. Rush; Geary K. Schwemmer; Bruce M. Gentry; P. Di Girolamo; J. Comer; Igor Veselovskii; Keith Evans; S. H. Melfi; Zhien Wang; M. Cadirola; B. Mielke; D. Venable; T. Van Hove

The amount of water vapor in the atmosphere helps to determine the likelihood that severe storms may develop. The concentration of water vapor, though, is highly variable in space and time. And yet small changes in water vapor concentration over a short period of time or over a short spatial distance can determine whether a storm may or may not develop. Therefore, in order to improve the ability to forecast severe weather such as thunderstorms it is important to measure water vapor in the atmosphere with high spatial and temporal resolution. One of the most attractive research tools for measuring water vapor in the atmosphere with high spatial and temporal resolution is a Raman lidar. A Raman lidar consists of a laser transmitter, a telescope receiver and optics and electronics for processing opticand electronic signals. A laser pulse is emitted into the atmosphere and it interacts with molecules in the atmosphere causing them to become excited and to emit, through the Raman process, photons of different wavelength than emitted by the laser. The molecule that emitted these emitted. This is the way that a Raman lidar identifies water vapor molecules in the atmosphere. can be identified based on the wavelength of the photons One of the great challenges in Raman lidar measurements has been to make useful daytime measurements of the water vapor profile under bright daytime conditions. In this first of two papers, we describe the instrumentation and analysis of the first documented Raman lidar that is able to measure water vapor in the daytime with sufficient quality to permit the study of developing storm systems.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2000

Comparison of Aerosol Optical Properties and Water Vapor Among Ground and Airborne Lidars and Sun Photometers During TARFOX

Richard A. Ferrare; Syed Ismail; Edward V. Browell; Vincent G. Brackett; Marian B. Clayton; Susan A. Kooi; S. H. Melfi; David N. Whiteman; G. Schwemmer; Keith Evans; P. B. Russell; J. M. Livingston; Beat Schmid; Brent N. Holben; Lorraine A. Remer; Alexander Smirnov; Peter V. Hobbs

We compare aerosol optical thickness (AOT) and precipitable water vapor (PWV) measurements derived from ground and airborne lidars and Sun photometers during the Tropo- spheric Aerosol Radiative Forcing Observational Experiment. Such comparisons are important to verify the consistency between various remote sensing measurements before employing them in any assessment of the impact of aerosols on the global radiation balance. Total scattering ratio and extinction profiles measured by the ground-based NASA Goddard Space Flight Center scan- ning Raman lidar system, which operated from Wallops Island, Virginia (37.86oN, 75.51 oW), are compared with those measured by the Lidar Atmospheric Sensing Experiment (LASE) airborne lidar system aboard the NASA ER-2 aircraft. Bias and root-mean-square differences indicate that these measurements generally agreed within about 10%. Aerosol extinction profiles and esti- mates of AOT are derived from both lidar measurements using a value for the aerosol extinction/ backscattering ratio Sa = 60 sr for the aerosol extinction/backscattering ratio, which was deter- mined from the Raman lidar measurements. The lidar measurements of AOT are found to be gen- erally within 25% of the AOT measured by the NASA Ames Airborne Tracking Sun Photometer (AATS-6). However, during certain periods the lidar and Sun photometer measurements of AOT differed significantly, possibly because of variations in the aerosol physical characteristics (e.g., size, composition) which affect Sa. Estimates of PWV, derived from water vapor mixing ratio profiles measured by LASE, are within 5-10% of PWV derived from the airborne Sun photometer. Aerosol extinction profiles measured by both lidars show that aerosols were generally concen- trated in the lowest 2-3 km.


Monthly Weather Review | 2006

The dryline on 22 May 2002 during IHOP_2002: Convective-scale measurements at the profiling site

Belay Demoz; Cyrille Flamant; Tammy M. Weckwerth; David C. Whiteman; Keith Evans; Frédéric Fabry; Paolo Di Girolamo; David O. Miller; Bart Geerts; William O. J. Brown; Geary K. Schwemmer; Bruce M. Gentry; Wayne F. Feltz; Zhien Wang

Abstract A detailed analysis of the structure of a double dryline observed over the Oklahoma panhandle during the first International H2O Project (IHOP_2002) convective initiation (CI) mission on 22 May 2002 is presented. A unique and unprecedented set of high temporal and spatial resolution measurements of water vapor mixing ratio, wind, and boundary layer structure parameters were acquired using the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) scanning Raman lidar (SRL), the Goddard Lidar Observatory for Winds (GLOW), and the Holographic Airborne Rotating Lidar Instrument Experiment (HARLIE), respectively. These measurements are combined with the vertical velocity measurements derived from the National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) Multiple Antenna Profiler Radar (MAPR) and radar structure function from the high-resolution University of Massachusetts frequency-modulated continuous-wave (FMCW) radar to reveal the evolution and structure of the late afternoon double-dryline boundary layer...


Journal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology | 2006

Raman Lidar Measurements during the International H2O Project. Part II: Case Studies

David N. Whiteman; Belay Berhane Demoz; Geary K. Schwemmer; Bruce M. Gentry; P. Di Girolamo; Domenico Sabatino; J. Comer; Igor Veselovskii; Keith Evans; R-F. Lin; Zhien Wang; Andreas Behrendt; V. Wulfmeyer; Edward V. Browell; Richard A. Ferrare; Syed Ismail; Junhong Wang

Abstract The NASA GSFC Scanning Raman Lidar (SRL) participated in the International H2O Project (IHOP) that occurred in May and June 2002 in the midwestern part of the United States. The SRL system configuration and methods of data analysis were described in Part I of this paper. In this second part, comparisons of SRL water vapor measurements and those of Lidar Atmospheric Sensing Experiment (LASE) airborne water vapor lidar and chilled-mirror radiosonde are performed. Two case studies are then presented: one for daytime and one for nighttime. The daytime case study is of a convectively driven boundary layer event and is used to characterize the daytime SRL water vapor random error characteristics. The nighttime case study is of a thunderstorm-generated cirrus cloud case that is studied in its meteorological context. Upper-tropospheric humidification due to precipitation from the cirrus cloud is quantified as is the cirrus cloud optical depth, extinction-to-backscatter ratio, ice water content, cirrus pa...


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 1994

Raman Lidar Profiling of Atmospheric Water Vapor: Simultaneous Measurements with Two Collocated Systems

John E. M. Goldsmith; Scott E. Bisson; Richard A. Ferrare; Keith Evans; David N. Whiteman; S. H. Melfi

Abstract Raman lidar is a loading candidate for providing the detailed space-and time-resolved measurements of water vapor needed by a variety of atmospheric studies. Simultaneous measurements of atmospheric watervapor are described using two collocated Raman lidar systems. These lidar systems, developed at the NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center and Sandia National Laboratories, acquired approximately 12 hours of simultaneous water vapor data during three nights in November 1992 while the systems were collocated at the Goddard Space Flight Center. Although these lidar systems differ substantially in their design, measured water vapor profiles agreed within 0.159 g Kg−1 between altitudes of 1 and 5 km. Comparisons with coincident radiosondes showed all instruments agreed within 0.2 g kg−1 in this same altitude range. Both lidars also clearly showed the advection of water vapor in the middle troposphere and the pronounced increase in water vapor in the nocturnal boundary layer that occurred during one night.


Optics Letters | 1993

Temperature sensitivity of an atmospheric Raman lidar system based on a XeF excimer laser

David N. Whiteman; W. F. Murphy; Nita W. Walsh; Keith Evans

The temperature sensitivity of Raman backscattering from atmospheric nitrogen, oxygen, and water vapor is considered over the range of temperatures expected in the troposphere. These results are applied to the Raman spectrum induced by a XeF excimer laser, which produces three line groups centered at approximately 349, 351, and 353 nm. Bandpass filter characteristics are determined for this case.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2000

Raman LIDAR detection of cloud base

Belay Demoz; David Oc. Starr; David N. Whiteman; Keith Evans; Dennis L. Hlavka; Ravindra Peravali

Advantages introduced by Raman lidar systems for cloud base determination during precipitating periods are explored using two case studies of light rain and virga conditions. A combination of the Raman lidar derived profiles of water vapor mixing ratio and aerosol scattering ratio, together with the Raman scattered signals from liquid drops, can minimize or even eliminate some of the problems associated with cloud boundary detection using elastic backscatter lidars.


Monthly Weather Review | 2005

The Cold Front of 15 April 1994 over the Central United States. Part I: Observations

Belay Demoz; David Oc. Starr; Keith Evans; A. R. Lare; David N. Whiteman; Geary K. Schwemmer; Richard A. Ferrare; J. E. M. Goldsmith; S. E. Bisson

Abstract Detailed observations of the interactions of a cold front and a dryline over the central United States that led to dramatic undulations in the boundary layer, including an undular bore, are investigated using high-resolution water vapor mixing ratio profiles measured by Raman lidars. The lidar-derived water vapor mixing ratio profiles revealed the complex interaction between a dryline and a cold-frontal system. An elevated, well-mixed, and deep midtropospheric layer, as well as a sharp transition (between 5- and 6-km altitude) to a drier region aloft, was observed. The moisture oscillations due to the undular bore and the mixing of the prefrontal air mass with the cold air at the frontal surface are all well depicted. The enhanced precipitable water vapor and roll clouds, the undulations associated with the bore, the strong vertical circulation and mixing that led to the increase in the depth of the low-level moist layer, and the subsequent lifting of this moist layer by the cold-frontal surface,...


Archive | 1997

Raman Lidar and Sun Photometer Measurements of Aerosols and Water Vapor

R. A. Ferrare; S. H. Melfi; David N. Whiteman; Keith Evans; Geary K. Schwemmer; Y. Kaufman; R. Ellingson

NASA/GSFC Scanning Raman Lidar measurements of water vapor mixing ratio, relative humidity, aerosol backscattering and extinction are used to investigate relationships between aerosol optical properties and water vapor.

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David N. Whiteman

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Geary K. Schwemmer

Goddard Space Flight Center

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S. H. Melfi

University of Maryland

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Bruce M. Gentry

Goddard Space Flight Center

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David Oc. Starr

Goddard Space Flight Center

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