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CALIPSO Profile over China, India and Bhutan

Aerosols, small particles in the atmosphere, can be produced from natural sources, such as volcanos and dust storms, or from human activity, such as pollution from manufacturing and automobiles. Aerosols remain in the atmosphere for long periods and travel across the globe propelled by winds. They also affect weather and climate by reflecting or absorbing sunlight and by altering chemical reactions within the atmosphere. The CALIOP lidar onboard the CALIPSO satellite enables scientists to collect aerosol data on slices or 'curtains' through the atmosphere. In these images looking east across India over the Himalayan Mountains and Bangladesh, slices of total attenuated backscatter show the geographic location and altitude of both aerosols and subvisible clouds in the upper troposphere. The curtain shown here extends from sea level to a height of 20 km. Both the height of the curtain and the terrain are exaggerated by 6x.

This image is a wide-angle view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over the Himalayan Mountains and eastern India.  The near- vertical line marks the 30 degree north latitude while the horizontal line marks 90 degree east longitude.    This image is a wide-angle view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over the Himalayan Mountains and eastern India. The near- vertical line marks the 30 degree north latitude while the horizontal line marks 90 degree east longitude.

Available formats:
  2000 x 1000     TIFF 2 MB
  320 x 160         PNG 75 KB


This image is a close-up view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over the Himalayan Mountains.    This image is a close-up view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over the Himalayan Mountains.

Available formats:
  2000 x 1000     TIFF 2 MB
  320 x 160         PNG 77 KB


This image is a close-up view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over eastern India.  The Himalayan Mountains are on the left. The near- vertical line along the left-hand side marks the 30 degree north latitude.    This image is a close-up view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over eastern India. The Himalayan Mountains are on the left. The near- vertical line along the left-hand side marks the 30 degree north latitude.

Available formats:
  2000 x 1000     TIFF 3 MB
  320 x 160         PNG 77 KB


This image shows another close-up view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over eastern India. The Himalayan Mountains are on the left. The near- horizontal line in the foreground marks the 90 degree east longitude.    This image shows another close-up view of the profile of CALIPSO total attenuated backscatter from 2006-06-15. The view is looking eastward over eastern India. The Himalayan Mountains are on the left. The near- horizontal line in the foreground marks the 90 degree east longitude.

Available formats:
  2000 x 1000     TIFF 2 MB
  320 x 160         PNG 66 KB
  160 x 80           PNG 17 KB
  80 x 40             PNG   4 KB



This color bar used to map the total attenuated backscatter is semi-transparent black for small values less than 0.01. All other values are opaque.
   This color bar used to map the total attenuated backscatter is semi-transparent black for small values less than 0.01. All other values are opaque.

Available formats:
  320 x 90           PNG 15 KB

Animation Number:3366
Animator:Cindy Starr (Lead)
Studio:SVS
Completed:2006-07-27
Scientist:Charles Trepte (NASA/LaRC)
Instrument:CALIPSO/CALIOP
Data set:Total Attenuated Backscatter
Data Collected:2006-06-15
Keywords:
DLESE >> Atmospheric science
GCMD >> EARTH SCIENCE >> Atmosphere >> Aerosols >> Aerosol Backscatter
 
 
Please give credit for this item to
Pat Lucker (NASA/LaRC)

NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center Scientific Visualization Studio
The Blue Marble data is courtesy of Reto Stockli (NASA/GSFC).


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