56 research outputs found
A tandem approach for collocated measurements of microphysical and radiative cirrus properties
Microphysical and
radiation measurements were collected with the novel AIRcraft TOwed Sensor
Shuttle (AIRTOSS) – Learjet tandem platform. The platform is a combination
of an instrumented Learjet 35A research aircraft and an aerodynamic bird,
which is detached from and retracted back to the aircraft during flight via a
steel wire with a length of 4000 m. Both platforms are equipped with
radiative, cloud microphysical, trace gas, and meteorological instruments.
The purpose of the development of this tandem set-up is to study the
inhomogeneity of cirrus as well as other stratiform clouds. Sophisticated
numerical flow simulations were conducted in order to optimally integrate an
axially asymmetric Cloud Combination Probe (CCP) inside AIRTOSS. The tandem
platform was applied during measurements at altitudes up to
36 000 ft (10 970 m) in the framework of the AIRTOSS –
Inhomogeneous Cirrus Experiment (AIRTOSS-ICE). Ten flights were performed
above the North Sea and Baltic Sea to probe frontal and in situ formed
cirrus, as well as anvil outflow cirrus. For one flight, cirrus microphysical
and radiative properties displayed significant inhomogeneities resolved by
both measurement platforms. The CCP data show that the maximum of the
observed particle number size distributions shifts with decreasing altitude
from 30 to 300 µm, which is typical for frontal, midlatitude
cirrus. Theoretical considerations imply that cloud particle aggregation
inside the studied cirrus is very unlikely. Consequently, diffusional growth
was identified to be the dominant microphysical growth process. Measurements
of solar downward and upward irradiances at 670 nm wavelength were conducted
above, below, and in the cirrus on both the Learjet and AIRTOSS. The observed
variability of the downward irradiance below the cirrus reflects the
horizontal heterogeneity of the observed thin cirrus. Vertically resolved
solar heating rates were derived by either using single-platform measurements
at different altitudes or by making use of the collocated irradiance
measurements at different altitudes of the tandem platform. Due to
unavoidable biases of the measurements between the individual flight legs,
the single-platform approach failed to provide a realistic solar heating rate
profile, while the uncertainties of the tandem approach are reduced. Here,
the solar heating rates range up to 6 K day−1 at top of the
cirrus layer
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