Martian atmospheric CO 2 and pressure profiling with differential
absorption lidar: System consideration and simulation results
Abstract
This study explores a new concept of Martian differential absorption
lidar operating at the 2-m CO2 absorption band for its atmospheric CO2
and pressure observations. For the considered system, closely-spaced two
or more wavelengths are selected so that environmental impacts such as
surface reflection, atmospheric scattering, and absorptions from other
trace gases on the lidar return signals are very similar for all
selected wavelengths, but the difference in CO2 absorption is
substantial. Thus, Martian CO2 amount and air pressure could be
retrieved from the measured CO2 differential absorption optical depth at
the selected wavelengths. Simulations based on Mar’s environmental
conditions and technically available lidar systems show that lidar
returns from the surface with horizontally 5 km averaging could have
sufficient signal strengths that allow air barometry and CO2 amount
measurements with a noise induced random error (NIRE) smaller than 1%
when the optical depth due to dust scattering, the dominant scatter in
the Martian atmosphere, is 3 or less. In the presence of moderate dust
aerosol loads and with the optimal selection of offline and online
wavelengths, atmospheric CO2 and pressure profiles could also be
retrieved from the surface up to ~10 km altitude with
the NIRE smaller than 1% for a horizontal resolution of 100 km and a
vertical resolution of 100 m during night or 400 m during day. When a
second online wavelength is use, the lidar would provide invaluable
measurements of Martian CO2 and pressure fields from surface up to about
13 km altitude.