68 research outputs found
Pyrocumulonimbus Stratospheric Plume Injections Measured by the ACEâFTS
The Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment (ACE) is a satelliteâbased mission that probes Earth\u27s atmosphere via solar occultation. The primary instrument on board is a highâresolution infrared Fourier transform spectrometer (Atmospheric Chemistry Experiment Fourier Transform Spectrometer, ACEâFTS), providing altitudeâresolved volume mixing ratio measurements for numerous atmospheric constituents, including many biomass burning products. The ACE mission has observed the aftermath of three major pyrocumulonimbus events, in which extreme heat from intense fires created a pathway for directly injecting into the stratosphere plumes of gaseous and aerosol pollutants. These three events were associated with severe Australian bushfires from 2009 and 2019/2020, along with intense North American wildfires from summer 2017. The ACEâFTS measured stratospheric plumes containing aerosols, enhanced levels of gaseous fire products, and tropospheric air transported into the stratosphere. Infrared spectral features indicate strikingly similar aerosol composition for all three events, characteristic of oxygenated organic matter
MIPAS temperature from the stratosphere to the lower thermosphere: Comparison of vM21 with ACE-FTS, MLS, OSIRIS, SABER, SOFIE and lidar measurements
We present vM21 MIPAS temperatures from the lower stratosphere to the lower
thermosphere, which cover all optimized resolution measurements performed by
MIPAS in the middle-atmosphere, upper-atmosphere and noctilucent-cloud modes
during its lifetime, i.e., from January 2005 to April 2012. The main upgrades
with respect to the previous version of MIPAS temperatures (vM11) are the
update of the spectroscopic database, the use of a different climatology of
atomic oxygen and carbon dioxide, and the improvement in important technical
aspects of the retrieval setup (temperature gradient along the line of sight
and offset regularizations, apodization accuracy). Additionally, an updated
version of ESA-calibrated L1b spectra (5.02/5.06) is used. The vM21
temperatures correct the main systematic errors of the previous version
because they provide on average a 1â2 K warmer stratopause and middle
mesosphere, and a 6â10 K colder mesopause (except in high-latitude summers)
and lower thermosphere. These lead to a remarkable improvement in MIPAS
comparisons with ACE-FTS, MLS, OSIRIS, SABER, SOFIE and the two Rayleigh
lidars at Mauna Loa and Table Mountain, which, with a few specific exceptions,
typically exhibit differences smaller than 1 K below 50 km and than 2 K at
50â80 km in spring, autumn and winter at all latitudes, and summer at low to
midlatitudes. Differences in the high-latitude summers are typically smaller
than 1 K below 50 km, smaller than 2 K at 50â65 km and 5 K at
65â80 km. Differences between MIPAS and the other instruments in the
mid-mesosphere are generally negative. MIPAS mesopause is within 4 K of the
other instruments measurements, except in the high-latitude summers, when it
is within 5â10 K, being warmer there than SABER, MLS and OSIRIS and colder
than ACE-FTS and SOFIE. The agreement in the lower thermosphere is typically
better than 5 K, except for high latitudes during spring and summer, when
MIPAS usually exhibits larger vertical gradients
An approach to retrieve information on the carbonyl fluoride (COFâ) vertical distributions above Jungfraujoch by FTIR multi-spectrum multi-window fitting
We present an original multi-spectrum fitting procedure to retrieve volume mixing ratio (VMR) profiles of carbonyl fluoride (COF2) from ground-based high resolution Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) solar spectra. The multi-spectrum approach consists of simultaneously combining, during the retrievals, all spectra recorded consecutively during the same day and with the same resolution. Solar observations analyzed in this study with the SFIT-2 v3.91 fitting algorithm correspond to more than 2900 spectra recorded between January 2000 and December 2007 at high zenith angles, with a Fourier Transform Spectrometer operated at the high-altitude International Scientific Station of the Jungfraujoch (ISSJ, 46.5° N latitude, 8.0° E longitude, 3580m altitude), Switzerland. The goal of the retrieval strategy described here is to provide information about the vertical distribution of carbonyl fluoride. The microwindows used are located in the Ï
1 or in the Ï
4 COF2 infrared (IR) absorption bands. Averaging kernel and eigenvector analysis indicates that our FTIR retrieval is sensitive to COF2 inversion between 17 and 30 km, with the major contribution to the retrieved information always coming from the measurement. Moreover, there was no significant bias between COF2 partial columns, total columns or VMR profiles retrieved from the two bands. For each wavenumber region, a complete error budget including all identified sources has been carefully established. In addition, comparisons of FTIR COF2 17â30 km partial columns with KASIMA and SLIMCAT 3-D CTMs are also presented. If we do not notice any significant bias between FTIR and SLIMCAT time series, KASIMA COF2 17â30 km partial columns are lower of around 25%, probably due to incorrect lower boundary conditions. For each times series, linear trend estimation for the 2000â2007 time period as well as a seasonal variation study are also performed and critically discussed. For FTIR and KASIMA time series, very low COF2 growth rates (0.4±0.2%/year and 0.3±0.2%/year, respectively) have been derived. However, the SLIMCAT data set gives a slight negative trend (â0.5±0.2%/year), probably ascribable to discontinuities in the meteorological data used by this model. We further demonstrate that all time series are able to reproduce the COF2 seasonal cycle, which main seasonal characteristics deduced from each data set agree quite well
Deep Herschel view of obscured star formation in the Bullet cluster
We use deep, five band (100â500 ÎŒm) data from the Herschel Lensing Survey (HLS) to fully constrain the obscured star formation rate, SFRFIR, of galaxies in the Bullet cluster (z = 0.296), and a smaller background system (z = 0.35) in the same field. Herschel detects 23 Bullet cluster members with a total SFRFIR = 144±14 yr-1. On average, the background system contains brighter far-infrared (FIR) galaxies, with ~50% higher SFRFIR (21 galaxies; 207± 9 yr-1). SFRs extrapolated from 24 ÎŒm flux via recent templates (SFR24 ”m) agree well with SFRFIR for ~60% of the cluster galaxies. In the remaining ~40%, SFR24 ”m underestimates SFRFIR due to a significant excess in observed S100/S24 (rest frame S75/S18) compared to templates of the same FIR luminosity
The effect of a ploughpan in marine loam soils on potato growth. 1. Physical properties and rooting patterns
Aardappelen blijken in Oostelijk Flevoland dieper te wortelen en hogere opbrengsten te geven dan in het Zuidwestelijk kleigebied. Hieruit is de hypothese afgeleid volgens welke het optreden van ploegzolen in het Zuidwesten hiervoor verantwoordelijk zijn. Resultaten van een onderzoek in Zuid-West Nederland en in Oostelijk Flevolan
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