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Measurements of atmospheric layers from the NASA DC-8 and P-3B aircraft during PEM-Tropics A

Authors :
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Cho, John, Y. N.
Stoller, Patrick C
Cho, J. Y. N.
Newell, R. E.
Thouret, V.
Zhu, Y.
Carroll, M. A.
Albercook, G. M.
Anderson, B. E.
Barrick, J. D. W.
Browell, E. V.
Gregory, G. L.
Sachse, G. W.
Vay, S.
Bradshaw, J. D.
Sandholm, S.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences
Cho, John, Y. N.
Stoller, Patrick C
Cho, J. Y. N.
Newell, R. E.
Thouret, V.
Zhu, Y.
Carroll, M. A.
Albercook, G. M.
Anderson, B. E.
Barrick, J. D. W.
Browell, E. V.
Gregory, G. L.
Sachse, G. W.
Vay, S.
Bradshaw, J. D.
Sandholm, S.
Source :
John Cho
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Tropospheric vertical structure was analyzed using in situ measurements of O₃, CO, CH₄, and H₂O taken on board the NASA DC-8 aircraft during three Pacific Exploratory Missions (PEMs): PEM-West A, September-October 1991 in the western Pacific; PEM-West B, February-March 1994 in the western Pacific; and PEM-Tropics A, September-October 1996 in the central and eastern Pacific. PEM-Tropics A added measurements from the NASA P3-B aircraft. We used a new mode-based method to define a background against which to find layers. Using only O₃ and H₂O, we found 472 layers in PEM-Tropics A (0.72 layers per vertical kilometer profiled), 237 layers in PEM-West A (0.54 layers/km), and 158 layers in PEM-West B (0.41 layers/km). Using all constituents, we found 187 layers in PEM-Tropics A (0.43 layers/km), 128 layers in PEM-West A (0.29 layers/km), and 80 layers in PEM-West B (0.21 layers/km). Stratospheric air, sometimes mixed with trapped pollution, was the dominant layer source in all three missions. The larger number of layers per kilometer in PEM-Tropics A was probably due to repeated profiling of several “superlayers” visible in many of the mission lidar and potential voracity profiles. The thickness of the superlayers was of order 1 km, and the horizontal extent was of order 1000 km. We found that layers have an important effect on the thermal structure. An example based on ozonesonde data from Tahiti is shown, where a dry, subsiding layer was stabilized by much greater radiative cooling at the base than at the top. The stabilized layer can trap pollution and force vertical plumes to spread into horizontal layers.<br />United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NAG1-1758)<br />United States. National Aeronautics and Space Administration (Grant NAG1-1901)

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
John Cho
Notes :
application/pdf, en_US
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1286402966
Document Type :
Electronic Resource