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MANTRA ‐ A Balloon Mission to Study the Odd‐Nitrogen Budget of the Stratosphere

Authors :
Y. J. Rochon
A. Jofre
Jacek W. Kaminski
Stella M. L. Melo
Frank J. Murcray
J. R. Olson
C. Laurin
Caroline R. Nowlan
Robert O. Hall
James R. Drummond
E. Forsberg
Ronald D. Blatherwick
J. J. Kosters
Debra Wunch
P. F. Fogal
Volodya Savastiouk
Brendan M. Quine
S. Werchohlad
Clive Midwinter
H. Wu
Chris A. McLinden
Kimberly Strong
C. T. McElroy
M.R. Bassford
Brian Solheim
S. Brown
D. Sommerfeldt
K. Menzies
Jonathan Davies
D. J. Chartrand
D. V. Barton
George V. Bailak
A. Ullberg
J. C. McConnell
Source :
Atmosphere-Ocean. 43:283-299
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Informa UK Limited, 2005.

Abstract

The Middle Atmosphere Nitrogen TRend Assessment (MANTRA) series of high‐altitude balloon flights is being undertaken to investigate changes in the concentrations of northern hemisphere mid‐latitude stratospheric ozone, and of nitrogen and chlorine compounds that play a role in ozone chemistry. Four campaigns have been carried out to date, all from Vanscoy, Saskatchewan, Canada (52°01'N, 107°02'W, 511.0 m). The first MANTRA mission took place in August 1998, with the balloon flight on 24 August 1998 being the first Canadian launch of a large high‐altitude balloon in about fifteen years. The balloon carried a payload of instruments to measure atmospheric composition, and made measurements from a float altitude of 32–38 km for one day. Three of these instruments had been flown on the Stratoprobe flights of the Atmospheric Environment Service (now the Meteorological Service of Canada) in the 1970s and early 1980s, providing a link to historical data predating the onset of mid‐latitude ozone loss. The...

Details

ISSN :
14809214 and 07055900
Volume :
43
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Atmosphere-Ocean
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........52f6604849ed8e07d9f7a536d7c85a3d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3137/ao.430401