Accurate validation of spaceborne lidar data is fundamental for reliable quantification of aerosol vertical distributions, which strongly influence air quality and climate effects. This study presents a comparative analysis of aerosol profiles from the 532 nm High-Spectral-Resolution Lidar (HSRL) onboard China’s DQ-1 satellite (ACDL) and ground-based observations from the Asian Dust and Aerosol Lidar Observation Network (AD-Net). Using one year of measurements under minimized spatiotemporal mismatches at three representative coastal stations (Matsue, Tokyo, Hedo), we quantify the sources of observational differences. Results show that discrepancies in detection targets (aerosols/clouds) dominate the total variance (>75%), while instrumental differences contribute 10–25%. Horizontal wind speed, particularly its north–south component, correlates more strongly with discrepancies than vertical wind speed, except in high-concentration aerosol layers where vertical motions become influential. Furthermore, larger differences are associated with increased aerosol extinction coefficients (α) and particle depolarization ratios (δ). This work demonstrates that integrated applications of multi-platform lidar data must account for both meteorological controls on aerosol transport and particle microphysical properties. These findings provide a quantitative validation framework for current and future spaceborne HSRL missions and support the integrated application of multi-platform lidar observations in regional aerosol monitoring, air quality assessment, and climate effect research.
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Xicheng Zhang
Detlef Müller
Atsushi Shimizu
Remote Sensing
Wuhan University
National Institute for Environmental Studies
Tiande (China)
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Zhang et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a04153d79e20c90b4444f9b — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/rs18101491