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The Arctic atmosphere and subauroral region are a natural laboratory for understanding plasma-neutral and dynamical coupling in the atmosphere and geospace. During geomagnetically active periods the auroral electrojet and auroral precipitation are overhead at the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) facility in Gakona, Alaska (62°N, 145°W) and facilitate active experiments. Iron resonance lidar systems are uniquely suited for these active investigations as naturally occurring iron layers extend from the upper mesosphere to the middle thermosphere (~70-150 km). A novel lidar system has been demonstrated at the German Aerospace Center using an Nd:YAG laser that operated at a minor line at 1116 nm and was tripled to the iron resonance line at 372 nm. This prototype laser was fully solid-state without liquid dyes or flashlamps and with diode pumping. We are developing a lidar system based on this prototype system that can operate robustly at the remote location of HAARP. We will employ a diode-pumped Nd:YAG laser with second and third harmonic generation. The laser will be injection-seeded by a tunable diode laser allowing the laser to frequency scan the iron line. The laser pulse spectra will be recorded on a shot-by-shot basis using an etalon imaging system with a spectral reference. The lidar system is will operate at 372 nm, with a pulse repetition rate of 100 pps, a pulse energy of 30 mJ, and a 0.9-m diameter telescope. We present the system specifications and the expected performance of the system.more » « less
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Collins, R; Li, J; Wiliams, B; Kaifler, B; Thorsen, D (, 30th International laser radar Conference (ILRC-30))The Arctic atmosphere and subauroral region are a natural laboratory for understanding plasma-neutral and dynamical coupling in the atmosphere and geospace. During geomagnetically active periods the auroral electrojet and auroral precipitation are overhead at the High-Frequency Active Auroral Research Program (HAARP) facility in Gakona, Alaska (62°N, 145°W) and facilitate active experiments. Iron resonance lidar systems are uniquely suited for these active investigations as naturally occurring iron layers extend from the upper mesosphere to the middle thermosphere (~70-150 km). A novel lidar system has been demonstrated at the German Aerospace Center using an Nd:YAG laser that operated at a minor line at 1116 nm and was tripled to the iron resonance line at 372 nm. This prototype laser was fully solid-state without liquid dyes or flashlamps and with diode pumping. We are developing a lidar system based on this prototype system that can operate robustly at the remote location of HAARP. We will employ a diode-pumped Nd:YAG laser with second and third harmonic generation. The laser will be injection-seeded by a tunable diode laser allowing the laser to frequency scan the iron line. The laser pulse spectra will be recorded on a shot-by-shot basis using an etalon imaging system with a spectral reference. The lidar system is will operate at 372 nm, with a pulse repetition rate of 100 pps, a pulse energy of 30 mJ, and a 0.9-m diameter telescope. We present the system specifications and the expected performance of the system.more » « less
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