125 research outputs found
Thermodynamic correction of particle concentrations measured by underwing probes on fast flying aircraft
Particle concentration measurements with underwing probes on aircraft are impacted by air compression upstream of the instrument body as a function of flight velocity. In particular for fast-flying aircraft the necessity arises to account for compression of the air sample volume. Hence, a correction procedure is needed to invert measured particle number concentrations to ambient conditions that is commonly applicable for different instruments to gain comparable results. In the compression region where the detection of particles occurs (i.e. under factual measurement conditions), pressure and temperature of the air sample are increased compared to ambient (undisturbed) conditions in certain distance away from the aircraft. Conventional procedures for scaling the measured number densities to ambient conditions presume that the particle penetration speed through the instruments' detection area equals the aircraft speed (True Air Speed, TAS). However, particle imaging instruments equipped with pitot-tubes measuring the Probe Air Speed (PAS) of each underwing probe reveal PAS values systematically below those of the TAS. We conclude that the deviation between PAS and TAS is mainly caused by the compression of the probed air sample. From measurements during two missions in 2014 with the German Gulfstream G-550 (HALO â High Altitude LOng range) research aircraft we develop a procedure to correct the measured particle concentration to ambient conditions using a thermodynamic approach. With the provided equation the corresponding concentration correction factor Ο is applicable to the high frequency measurements of each underwing probe which is equipped with its own air speed sensor (e.g. a pitot-tube). Ο-values of 1 to 0.85 are calculated for air speeds (i.e. TAS) between 60 and 260 m sâ1. From HALO data it is found that Ο does not significantly vary between the different deployed instruments. Thus, for the current HALO underwing probe configuration a parameterisation of Ο as a function of TAS is provided for instances if PAS measurements are lacking. The Ο-correction yields higher ambient particle concentration by about 15â25 % compared to conventional procedures â an improvement which can be considered as significant for many research applications. The calculated Ο-values are specifically related to the considered HALO underwing probe arrangement and may differ for other aircraft or instrument geometries. Moreover, the Ο-correction may not cover all impacts originating from high flight velocities and from interferences between the instruments and, e.g., the aircraft wings and/or fuselage. Consequently, it is important that PAS (as a function of TAS) is individually measured by each probe deployed underneath the wings of a fast-flying aircraft
Long-range transport pathways of tropospheric source gases originating in Asia into the northern lower stratosphere during the Asian monsoon season 2012
Global simulations with the Chemical Lagrangian Model of the Stratosphere (CLaMS) using artificial tracers of air mass origin are used to analyze transport mechanisms from the Asian monsoon region into the lower stratosphere. In a case study, the transport of air masses from the Asian monsoon anticyclone originating in India/China by an eastward-migrating anticyclone which broke off from the main anticyclone on 20 September 2012 and filaments separated at the northeastern flank of the anticyclone are analyzed. Enhanced contributions of young air masses (younger than 5 months) are found within the separated anticyclone confined at the top by the thermal tropopause. Further, these air masses are confined by the anticyclonic circulation and, on the polar side, by the subtropical jet such that the vertical structure resembles a bubble within the upper troposphere. Subsequently, these air masses are transported eastwards along the subtropical jet and enter the lower stratosphere by quasi-horizontal transport in a region of double tropopauses most likely associated with Rossby wave breaking events. As a result, thin filaments with enhanced signatures of tropospheric trace gases were measured in the lower stratosphere over Europe during the TACTS/ESMVal campaign in September 2012 in very good agreement with CLaMS simulations. Our simulations demonstrate that source regions in Asia and in the Pacific Ocean have a significant impact on the chemical composition of the lower stratosphere of the Northern Hemisphere. Young, moist air masses, in particular at the end of the monsoon season in September/October 2012, flooded the extratropical lower stratosphere in the Northern Hemisphere with contributions of up to â30% at 380K (with the remaining fraction being aged air). In contrast, the contribution of young air masses to the Southern Hemisphere is much lower. At the end of October 2012, approximately 1.5 ppmv HO is found in the lower Northern Hemisphere stratosphere (at 380 K) from source regions both in Asia and in the tropical Pacific compared to a mean water vapor content of â5 ppmv. In addition to this main transport pathway from the Asian monsoon anticyclone to the east along the subtropical jet and subsequent transport into the northern lower stratosphere, a second horizontal transport pathway out of the anticyclone to the west into the tropics (TTL) is found in agreement with MIPAS HCFC-22 measurements
Ice particle sampling from aircraft â influence of the probing position on the ice water content
The ice water content (IWC) of cirrus clouds is an
essential
parameter determining their radiative properties and thus is
important for climate simulations. Therefore, for a reliable
measurement of IWC on board research aircraft, it is important to
carefully design the ice crystal sampling and measuring devices.
During the ML-CIRRUS field campaign in 2014 with the German
Gulfstream GV HALO (High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft),
IWC was recorded by three closed-path total water together with one
gas-phase water instrument. The hygrometers were supplied by inlets
mounted on the roof of the aircraft fuselage. Simultaneously, the
IWC is determined by a cloud particle spectrometer attached under an
aircraft wing. Two more examples of simultaneous IWC measurements by
hygrometers and cloud spectrometers are presented, but the inlets of
the hygrometers were mounted at the fuselage side (M-55 Geophysica,
StratoClim campaign 2017) and bottom (NASA WB57, MacPex campaign 2011).
This combination of instruments and inlet positions provides the
opportunity to experimentally study the influence of the ice
particle sampling position on the IWC with the approach of
comparative measurements. As expected from theory and shown by
computational fluid dynamics (CFD) calculations, we found that the
IWCs provided by the roof inlets deviate from those measured under
the aircraft wing. As a result of the inlet position in the shadow zone
behind the aircraft cockpit, ice particle populations with mean
mass sizes larger than about 25âŻÂ”m radius are subject to
losses, which lead to strongly underestimated IWCs. On the other
hand, cloud populations with mean mass sizes smaller than about 12âŻÂ”m are dominated by particle enrichment and thus
overestimated IWCs. In the range of mean mass sizes between 12 and
25âŻÂ”m, both enrichment and losses of ice crystals can occur,
depending on whether the ice crystal mass peak of the size distribution â in these
cases bimodal â is on the smaller or larger mass
mode.
The resulting deviations of the IWC reach factors of up to 10 or
even more for losses as well as for enrichment. Since the mean mass
size of ice crystals increases with temperature, losses are more
pronounced at higher temperatures, while at lower temperatures IWC is
more affected by enrichment.
In contrast, in the cases where the hygrometer inlets were mounted
at the fuselage side or bottom, the agreement of IWCs is most
frequently within a factor of 2.5 or better â due to
less disturbed ice particle sampling, as expected from theory â independently of the
mean ice crystal sizes. The rather large scatter between IWC
measurements reflects, for example, cirrus cloud inhomogeneities and
instrument uncertainties as well as slight sampling biases which
might also occur on the side or bottom of the fuselage and under the
wing. However, this scatter is in the range of other studies and
represent the current best possible IWC recording on fast-flying
aircraft.</p
Vertical distribution of the particle phase in tropical deep convective clouds as derived from cloud-side reflected solar radiation measurements
Vertical profiles of cloud particle phase in tropical deep convective clouds (DCCs) were investigated using airborne solar spectral radiation data collected by the German High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO) during the ACRIDICON-CHUVA campaign, which was conducted over the Brazilian rainforest in September 2014. A phase discrimination retrieval based on imaging spectroradiometer measurements of DCC side spectral reflectivity was applied to clouds formed in different aerosol conditions. From the retrieval results the height of the mixedphase layer of the DCCs was determined. The retrieved profiles were compared with in situ measurements and satellite observations. It was found that the depth and vertical position of the mixed-phase layer can vary up to 900m for one single cloud scene. This variability is attributed to the different stages of cloud development in a scene. Clouds of mature or decaying stage are affected by falling ice particles resulting in lower levels of fully glaciated cloud layers compared to growing clouds. Comparing polluted and moderate aerosol conditions revealed a shift of the lower boundary of the mixed-phase layer from 5.6 +/- 0.2 km (269 K;moderate) to 6.2 +/- 0.3 km (267 K;polluted), and of the upper boundary from 6.8 +/- 0.2 km (263 K;moderate) to 7.4 +/- 0.4 km (259 K;polluted), as would be expected from theory
Illustration of microphysical processes in Amazonian deep convective clouds in the gamma phase space: introduction and potential applications
The behavior of tropical clouds remains a major open scientific question, resulting in poor representation by models. One challenge is to realistically reproduce cloud droplet size distributions (DSDs) and their evolution over time and space. Many applications, not limited to models, use the gamma function to represent DSDs. However, even though the statistical characteristics of the gamma parameters have been widely studied, there is almost no study dedicated to understanding the phase space of this function and the associated physics. This phase space can be defined by the three parameters that define the DSD intercept, shape, and curvature. Gamma phase space may provide a common framework for parameterizations and intercomparisons. Here, we introduce the phase space approach and its characteristics, focusing on warm-phase microphysical cloud properties and the transition to the mixed-phase layer. We show that trajectories in this phase space can represent DSD evolution and can be related to growth processes. Condensational and collisional growth may be interpreted as pseudo-forces that induce displacements in opposite directions within the phase space. The actually observed movements in the phase space are a result of the combination of such pseudo-forces. Additionally, aerosol effects can be evaluated given their significant impact on DSDs. The DSDs associated with liquid droplets that favor cloud glaciation can be delimited in the phase space, which can help models to adequately predict the transition to the mixed phase. We also consider possible ways to constrain the DSD in two-moment bulk microphysics schemes, in which the relative dispersion parameter of the DSD can play a significant role. Overall, the gamma phase space approach can be an invaluable tool for studying cloud microphysical evolution and can be readily applied in many scenarios that rely on gamma DSDs
Aerosol characteristics and particle production in the upper troposphere over the Amazon Basin
Airborne observations over the Amazon Basin showed high aerosol particle concentrations in the upper troposphere (UT) between 8 and 15âŻkm altitude, with number densities (normalized to standard temperature and pressure) often exceeding those in the planetary boundary layer (PBL) by 1 or 2 orders of magnitude. The measurements were made during the GermanâBrazilian cooperative aircraft campaign ACRIDICONâCHUVA, where ACRIDICON stands for Aerosol, Cloud, Precipitation, and Radiation Interactions and Dynamics of Convective Cloud Systems and CHUVA is the acronym for Cloud Processes of the Main Precipitation Systems in Brazil: A Contribution to Cloud Resolving Modeling and to the GPM (global precipitation measurement), on the German High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO). The campaign took place in SeptemberâOctober 2014, with the objective of studying tropical deep convective clouds over the Amazon rainforest and their interactions with atmospheric trace gases, aerosol particles, and atmospheric radiation.
Aerosol enhancements were observed consistently on all flights during which the UT was probed, using several aerosol metrics, including condensation nuclei (CN) and cloud condensation nuclei (CCN) number concentrations and chemical species mass concentrations. The UT particles differed sharply in their chemical composition and size distribution from those in the PBL, ruling out convective transport of combustion-derived particles from the boundary layer (BL) as a source. The air in the immediate outflow of deep convective clouds was depleted of aerosol particles, whereas strongly enhanced number concentrations of small particles (â90âŻnm) particles in the UT, which consisted mostly of organic matter and nitrate and were very effective CCN.
Our findings suggest a conceptual model, where production of new aerosol particles takes place in the continental UT from biogenic volatile organic material brought up by deep convection and converted to condensable species in the UT. Subsequently, downward mixing and transport of upper tropospheric aerosol can be a source of particles to the PBL, where they increase in size by the condensation of biogenic volatile organic compound (BVOC) oxidation products. This may be an important source of aerosol particles for the Amazonian PBL, where aerosol nucleation and new particle formation have not been observed. We propose that this may have been the dominant process supplying secondary aerosol particles in the pristine atmosphere, making clouds the dominant control of both removal and production of atmospheric particles
Sampling characteristics of inlets operated at low U/U_O ratios: new insights from computational fluid dynamics (CFX) modeling
Belyaev and Levin (Journal of Aerosol Science, 5 (1974) 325) (B&L) empirically derived a function for aspiration efficiencies A of thin-walled inlets operated at low velocity ratios U/U-0 (U flow velocity inside the inlet, U-0 velocity of the free flow). This function, which is especially applicable for particle sampling on fast, high-altitude aircraft, has not been experimentally or theoretically verified.By means of the computational fluid dynamics model (CFX), we evaluate this B&L function by explicitly determining inlet aspiration efficiencies over a wide range of high-altitude airborne applications. We find good agreement in the range where B&L performed their measurements (U/U-0 = 0.18-0.2, particle Stokes numbers Stk > 0.1), but for lower U/U-0 and smaller Stk the B&L function deviates from the CFX results. Therefore, we provide here a modified B&L function covering the ranges U/U-0 = 0.007-0.2 and Stk > 0.001:A(Stk) = (a Stk + b)/(a Stk + 1 + b) (U-0/U) + c(U/U-0) a = 1.26, b = 0.27, c = 0.50, (a) U/U-0 0.001.In addition, we used CFX to analyze the performance of a short inlet and demonstrate the strong sensitivity of the sampling characteristics to the inlet design, i.e. the particle transmission efficiency changes from zero for a standard inlet to 30% for a short inlet and the aspiration efficiencies of smaller particles are lower by approximately a factor of two when sampled with the short in comparison to the standard inlet. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved
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