10 research outputs found

    ARIS-Campaign: intercomparison of three ground based 22 GHz radiometers for middle atmospheric water vapor at the Zugspitze in winter 2009

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    This paper presents the Alpine Radiometer Intercomparison at the Schneefernerhaus (ARIS), which took place in winter 2009 at the high altitude station at the Zugspitze, Germany (47.42° N, 10.98° E, 2650 m). This campaign was the first direct intercomparison between three new ground based 22 GHz water vapor radiometers for middle atmospheric profiling with the following instruments participating: MIRA 5 (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology), cWASPAM3 (Max Planck Institute for Solar System Research, Katlenburg-Lindau) and MIAWARA-C (Institute of Applied Physics, University of Bern). Even though the three radiometers all measure middle atmospheric water vapor using the same rotational transition line and similar fundamental set-ups, there are major differences between the front ends, the back ends, the calibration concepts and the profile retrieval. The spectrum comparison shows that all three radiometers measure spectra without severe baseline artifacts and that the measurements are in good general agreement. The measurement noise shows good agreement to the values theoretically expected from the radiometer noise formula. At the same time the comparison of the noise levels shows that there is room for instrumental and calibration improvement, emphasizing the importance of low elevation angles for the observation, a low receiver noise temperature and an efficient calibration scheme. <br><br> The comparisons of the retrieved profiles show that the agreement between the profiles of MIAWARA-C and cWASPAM3 with the ones of MLS is better than 0.3 ppmv (6%) at all altitudes. MIRA 5 has a dry bias of approximately 0.5 ppm (8%) below 0.1 hPa with respect to all other instruments. The profiles of cWASPAM3 and MIAWARA-C could not be directly compared because the vertical region of overlap was too small. The comparison of the time series at different altitude levels show a similar evolution of the H<sub>2</sub>O volume mixing ratio (VMR) for the ground based instruments as well as the space borne sensor MLS

    The ground-based MW radiometer OZORAM on Spitsbergen &ndash; description and validation of stratospheric and mesospheric O<sub>3</sub>-measurements

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    Boy standing in corner of bin shoveling grain.GrayscaleSorensen Safety Negatives, Binder: North & Central America

    Exploring the Aggregation Propensity of γS-Crystallin Protein Variants Using Two-Dimensional Spectroscopic Tools

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    The formation of amyloid fibrils is associated with many 20 serious diseases as well as diverse biological functions. Despite the importance of these aggregates, predicting the aggregation propensity of a particular sequence is a major challenge. We report a joint 2D Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) and ultraviolet (2DUV) study of fibrillization in the wild type and two aggregation-prone mutants of the eye-lens protein γS-crystallin. Simulations show that the complexity of 2DUV signals as measured by their ”approximate entropy” is a good indicator for the conformational entropy and in turn is strongly correlated with its aggregation propensity. These findings are in agreement with high-resolution NMR experiments and are corroborated for amyloid fibrils. The 2DUV technique is complementary to high-resolution structural methods and has the potential to make the evaluation of the aggregation propensity for protein variants propensity of protein structure more accessible to both theory and experiment. The approximate entropy of experimental 2DUV signals can be used for fast screening, enabling identification of variants with high fibrillization propensity for the much more time consuming NMR structural studies, potentially expediting the characterization of protein variants associated with cataract and other protein aggregation diseases

    Atmospheric parameters for the North Sea: a review

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