Measurement of Mount Etna plume by CO2-laser-based lidar

Opt Lett. 2009 Mar 15;34(6):800-2. doi: 10.1364/ol.34.000800.

Abstract

The CO2 laser-based agile tuner lidar for atmospheric sensing has been used to profile the volcanic plume of Mount Etna during its most recent eruption. Owing to the transmitted wavelength, this system is practically insensitive to air molecules while it detects aerosol loads, and thus the path attenuation of the laser beam is strongly affected by volcanic particulate. Vertical profiles of extinction coefficient were retrieved up to an altitude above ground level of 5000 m. The observed extinction coefficient ranges from 10(-5) to 5x10(-4) m(-1). The lidar was able to accurately track the spatiotemporal evolution of the volcanic plume thanks to a spatial resolution of 15 m and a temporal resolution of 1 min.