Energy and Environment

Smokestack Monitor

Originally published in 1980
Body

Environmental Protection Agency monitors emissions from industrial smokestacks to obtain such information as how much pollutant material is being discharged into the atmosphere, how rapidly it is being discharged, and how the smoke plume disperses after leaving the stack. Raytheon's invisible laser beam, adapted from NASA's laser doppler technology, measures emission from one of the stacks. Aimed from a van's interior, the beam is projected from the roof mounted scanning pod near the rear of the vehicle. Particles in the smoke coming out of the stack reflect the beam back to light-detecting equipment in the van. The frequency of the returned beam is different from that of outgoing beam; analysis of the difference in frequencies, called doppler shift" allows determination of the velocity."

Full article: http://hdl.handle.net/hdl:2060/20030004765

Abstract
Environmental Protection Agency monitors emissions from industrial smokestacks to obtain such information as how much pollutant material is being discharged into the atmosphere, how rapidly it is being discharged, and how the smoke plume disperses after leaving the stack. Raytheon's invisible laser beam, adapted from NASA's laser doppler technology, measures emission from one of the stacks. Aimed from a van's interior, the beam is projected from the roof mounted scanning pod near the rear of the vehicle. Particles in the smoke coming out of the stack reflect the beam back to light-detecting equipment in the van. The frequency of the returned beam is different from that of outgoing beam; analysis of the difference in frequencies, called doppler shift" allows determination of the velocity."
Smokestack Monitor

Smokestack Monitor

Smokestack Monitor

Smokestack Monitor