Wildfire Smoke Observations in the Western United States from the Airborne Wyoming Cloud Lidar during the BB-FLUX Project. Part I: Data Description and Methodology

  • Min Deng
  • , Zhien Wang
  • , Rainer Volkamer
  • , Jefferson R. Snider
  • , Larry Oolman
  • , David M. Plummer
  • , Natalie Kille
  • , Kyle J. Zarzana
  • , Christopher F. Lee
  • , Teresa Campos
  • , Nicholas Ryan Mahon
  • , Brent Glover
  • , Matthew D. Burkhart
  • , Austin Morgan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

4 Scopus citations

Abstract

During the summer of 2018, the upward-pointing Wyoming Cloud Lidar (WCL) was deployed on board the University of Wyoming King Air (UWKA) research aircraft for the Biomass Burning Flux Measurements of Trace Gases and Aerosols (BB-FLUX) field campaign. This paper describes the generation of calibrated attenuated backscatter coefficients and aerosol extinction coefficients from the WCL measurements. The retrieved aerosol extinction coefficients at the flight level strongly correlate (correlation coefficient, rr > 0.8) with in situ aerosol concentration and carbon monoxide (CO) concentration, providing a first-order estimate for converting WCL extinction coefficients into vertically resolved CO and aerosol concentration within wildfire smoke plumes. The integrated CO column concentrations from the WCL data in nonextinguished profiles also correlate (rr = 0.7) with column measurements by the University of Colorado Airborne Solar Occultation Flux instrument, indicating the validity of WCL-derived extinction coefficients. During BB-FLUX, the UWKA sampled smoke plumes from more than 20 wildfires during 35 flights over the western United States. Seventy percent of flight time was spent below 3 km above ground level (AGL) altitude, although the UWKA ascended up to 6 km AGL to sample the top of some deep smoke plumes. The upward-pointing WCL observed a nearly equal amount of thin and dense smoke below 2 km and above 5 km due to the flight purpose of targeted fresh fire smoke. Between 2 and 5 km, where most of the wildfire smoke resided, the WCL observed slightly more thin smoke than dense smoke due to smoke spreading. Extinction coefficients in dense smoke were 2–10 times stronger, and dense smoke tended to have larger depolarization ratio, associated with irregular aerosol particles.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)545-558
Number of pages14
JournalJournal of Atmospheric and Oceanic Technology
Volume39
Issue number5
DOIs
StatePublished - May 2022

Keywords

  • Aircraft observations
  • Algorithms
  • Biomass burning
  • In situ atmospheric observations
  • Lidars/Lidar observations
  • Remote sensing
  • Wildfires

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