The Cloud-Aerosol Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO) satellite mission is pleased to announce an initial release of its data products. CALIPSO provides new insight into the role that clouds and atmospheric aerosols (airborne particles) play in regulating Earth's weather, climate, and air quality. CALIPSO is a joint mission between NASA and CNES, the French space agency.
CALIPSO's payload includes an active lidar (CALIOP), a passive Infrared Imaging Radiometer (IIR), and visible Wide Field Camera. This data release consists of data beginning in mid June 2006 and includes Level 1 radiances from each of the instruments. This release also includes the lidar Level 2 vertical feature mask and cloud and aerosol layer products.
On June 7, during its first day of lidar operations, CALIPSO observed the layers of clouds and aerosols shown here in an orbit over eastern Asia, Indonesia and Australia. In the lower right hand portion of the figure you can see the trace of the changing surface elevation of the Australian continent, a low horizontal line. Just above the surface, in a layer several kilometers deep, a layer of aerosol particles is shown in shades of orange and red. The greenish-yellow and blue colors indicate the lidar signal reflected from air molecules. Clouds are especially easy to detect and are displayed by the brighter colors of pink and white. We can see that some of these clouds are quite dense because the region below them is shown as nearly black -- the light from the lidar cannot penetrate the thick clouds. Also visible are thin tropical cirrus clouds shown in greenish-blue, at a height of 12 to 15 kilometers (about 7 to 9 miles). There was a range bias at the time this data was acquired, so the ocean surface appears to be at an altitude of -500 meters (-1650 feet).
This image also illustrates an exciting feature of the CALIPSO satellite, the ability to detect and track volcanic plumes. On May 20, 2006, a major lava dome collapse took place at the Soufriere Hills Volcano on the island of Montserrat in the Caribbean Sea. The dome collapse involved an explosion that sent ash clouds to 17 kilometers (about 10.5 miles) high, probably entering the lower stratosphere. The sulfur dioxide column from this volcanic activity has been tracked by the Ozone Monitoring Instrument (OMI) on NASA's Aura spacecraft for several weeks. On June 6 and 8, OMI observed the sulfur dioxide plume over Indonesia, and in the lidar curtain profile above you can see a thin scattering layer at an altitude of about 20 kilometers (about 12 miles). Because of the altitude and the correlation with the location of the plume, the very thin layer of clouds appears to be the aerosol component of the plume from Soufriere. The layer appears to be non-depolarizing, so it may be primarily composed of sulfuric acid droplets, rather than ash particles. Volcanic plumes such as this can be hazardous to air traffic if they cross air traffic lanes at the altitude where commercial aircraft fly. The ability of CALIPSO to observe the location, altitude, optical properties and movement of aerosols around the globe improves our ability to assess and forecast episodes of poor air quality.

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