Aircraft measurements made during the "First Lagrangian" of the Atlantic Stratocumulus Transition Experiment
(ASTEX) between 12 and 14 June 1992 are presented. During this Lagrangian experiment an air mass
was followed that was advected southward by the mean wind. Five aircraft flights were undertaken to observe
the transition of a stratocumulus cloud deck to thin and broken stratocumulus clouds penetrated by cumulus
from below. From the horizontal aircraft legs the boundary layer mean structure, microphysics, turbulence
structure, and entrainment were analyzed. The vertical profiles of the vertical velocity skewness are shown to
illustrate the transition of a cloudy boundary layer predominantly driven by longwave radiative cooling at the
cloud top to one driven mainly by convection due to an unstable surface stratification and cumulus clouds.
During the last flight before the stratocumulus deck was observed to be broken and replaced by cumuli, the
total water flux, the virtual potential temperature flux, and the vertical velocity variance in the stratocumulus
cloud layer were found significantly larger compared with the previous flights. To analyze the cloud-top stability
the mean jumps of conserved variables across the inversion were determined from porpoising runs through the
cloud top. These jumps were compared with cloud-top entrainment instability criteria discussed in the literature.
It is suggested that enhanced entrainment of dry air is a key mechanism in the stratocumulus-cumulus transition