Abstract
A compact and simple 355-nm direct-detection Doppler wind lidar (DDDWL) was developed to measure the line-of-sight (LOS) wind speed of the background atmosphere from atmospheric molecule return signals with and without aerosols and clouds. A receiver design with a Fabry–Perot etalon interferometer (FPEI) without an inside deposited step coating or fiber coupling is considered for the DDDWL using the double-edge technique. The receiver with the double-edge technique uses a FPEI and wedge prism to form a double-edge filter. The development of the double-edge filter in this combination is, to the best of our knowledge, an improvement at 355-nm wavelength. Considerations for the DDDWL receiver with a FPEI revealed that a full-angle light beam divergence into the FPEI and a working FPEI aperture are significant factors for the receiver design. Preliminary experimental evaluation demonstrated that the DDDWL had the potential of LOS wind speed measurements with a random error of less than 1 m/s when the signal-to-noise ratio was approximately 300. The DDDWL-measured vertical LOS wind speed profile was consistent with that of a 2-µm coherent Doppler wind lidar within the measurement error range. The preliminary experimental LOS wind measurement results demonstrated the capability of the DDDWL to measure low LOS wind speeds.
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