The Aeolus mission by the European Space Agency was launched in August 2018 and stopped operations in April 2023. Aeolus carried the direct-detection Atmospheric LAser Doppler INstrument (ALADIN). To support the preparation of Aeolus, the ALADIN Airborne Demonstrator (A2D) instrument was developed and applied in several field campaigns. Both ALADIN and A2D consist of so-called Rayleigh and Mie channels used to measure wind from both molecular and particulate backscatter signals. The Mie channel is based on the fringe-imaging technique, which relies on determining the spatial location of a linear interference pattern (fringe) that originated from multiple interference in a Fizeau spectrometer. The accuracy of the retrieved winds is among others depending on the analytic algorithm used for determining the fringe location on the detector. In this paper, the performance of two algorithms using Lorentzian and Voigt fit functions is investigated by applying them to A2D data that were acquired during the AVATAR-I airborne campaign. For performance validation, the data of a highly accurate heterodyne detection wind lidar (2-µm DWL) that was flown in parallel are used as a reference. In addition, a fast and non-fit-based algorithm based on a four-pixel intensity ratio approach ( ) is developed. It is revealed that the Voigt-fit-based algorithm provides 50% more data points than the Lorentzian-based algorithm while applying a quality control that yields a similar random error of about 1.5 m/s. The algorithm is shown to deliver a similar accuracy as the Voigt-fit-based algorithms, with the advantage of a one to two orders of magnitude faster computation time. Principally, the algorithm can be adapted to other spectroscopic applications where sub-pixel knowledge of the location of measured peak profiles is needed.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1364/AO.502955DOI Listing

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