Poster's note : of interest for several reasons
A) offers a possible new transport mechanism for lofting material
B) explains basic atmospheric dynamics not currently well understood, and
potentially relevant to GE
C) use of the gulfstream jet may help test monitoring and delivery
technology relevant to GE

http://ewww2.ucar.edu/atmosnews/news/10889/scientists-examine-pacifics-global-chimney?utm_source=AtmosNews&utm_campaign=c1e1ca085e-NCAR_UCAR_AtmosNews1_17_2014&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_80502e816e-c1e1ca085e-30280033

SCIENTISTS TO EXAMINE PACIFIC’S “GLOBAL CHIMNEY”

January 07, 2014
BOULDER – Even though few people live in the western tropical Pacific
Ocean, these remote waters affect billions of people by shaping climate and
air chemistry worldwide. Next week, leading scientists will head to the
region to better understand its influence on the atmosphere—including how
that may change in coming decades if storms over the Pacific become more
powerful with rising global temperatures.With the warmest ocean waters on
Earth, the western tropical Pacific fuels a sort of chimney whose output
has global reach. The region feeds heat and moisture into huge clusters of
thunderstorms that loft gases and particles into the stratosphere, where
they spread out over the entire planet and influence the climate.“To figure
out the future of the air above our heads, we need to go to the western
Pacific,” said Laura Pan, a scientist at the National Center for
Atmospheric Research (NCAR) and one of the principal investigators on the
field project. “This region has been called the holy grail for
understanding global air transport, because so much surface air gets lifted
by the storms and then spreads globally.”The field project is called
CONTRAST (Convective Transport of Active Species in the Tropics). It is
funded by the National Science Foundation (NSF), which sponsors NCAR. More
than 40 scientists are taking part from NCAR, the University of Maryland,
the University of Miami, other universities across the country, and
NASA.CONTRAST, which will be based in Guam, is being coordinated with two
other field projects in order to give researchers an especially detailed
view of the air masses over the Pacific with a vertical range spanning tens
of thousands of feet.One of these projects, NASA’s Airborne Tropical
Tropopause Experiment (ATTREX), will use a Global Hawk, a robotic aerial
vehicle, to study upper-atmospheric water vapor, which influences global
climate. The other, CAST (Coordinated Airborne Studies in the Tropics) is
funded by Britain’s Natural Environment Research Council Facility and will
deploy a BAe146 research aircraft that will focus on air near the ocean
surface.Together, the sensor-laden research flights will provide a
comprehensive view of the atmosphere from the ocean surface, where gases
produced by marine organisms enter the air, to the stratosphere, more than
60,000 feet above.Showers and thunderstorms over the tropics can grow from
isolated systems, as shown here in the Maldives, to larger complexes that
loft vast quantities of air from the lower atmosphere to the stratosphere.
CONTRAST will examine how such circulations evolve over the western
tropical Pacific, where they can influence atmospheric chemistry over wide
areas. (Photo courtesy Adam Sobel, Columbia University.)“It’s a huge
region, and that means we have to use multiple aircraft,” said the
University of Maryland’s Ross Salawitch, a CONTRAST principal investigator.
“We will attempt to stage these three airplanes in harmony to measure the
atmospheric composition over the western Pacific when both ocean biology
and atmospheric storms are raging.”

GATEWAY TO THE STRATOSPHERE

As trade winds flow across the tropical Pacific, they push warm water to
the west, where it piles up in and near the CONTRAST study region. The
waters around Guam have the world’s highest sea surface temperatures of
open oceans. They provide heat and moisture to feed clusters of
thunderstorms that lift air through the troposphere (the lowest level of
the atmosphere) and the tropopause (a cold, shallow region atop the
troposphere) and then up into the stratosphere.Once in the
stratosphere—where the air tends to flow horizontally more than rising or
sinking—the gases and particles spread out around the world and linger for
years or even decades.Some of the gases, such as ozone and water vapor,
affect the amount of energy from the Sun that reaches Earth’s surface. The
amount of these gases in the stratosphere is important for the planet’s
climate. Other chemicals, such as bromine compounds, have indirect effects
by destroying ozone or otherwise altering the chemistry of the
stratosphere. And the gases produced by ocean organisms create a signature
of marine biology in the stratosphere.“There are so few measurements of
atmospheric composition in this important region of the atmosphere that we
expect to be able to significantly advance our understanding with the data
we will be able to collect during CONTRAST,” said Elliot Atlas of the
University of Miami, a CONTRAST principal investigator.As atmospheric
patterns evolve and sea surface temperatures warm further due to climate
change, the storm clusters over the Pacific are likely to influence climate
in ways that are now challenging to anticipate, NCAR’s Pan
said.“Understanding the impact of these storms will help us gain ground
truth for improving the chemistry-climate models we use to project future
climate,” she said.

COORDINATED FLIGHTS

The CONTRAST team will deploy the NSF/NCAR HIAPER aircraft, a Gulfstream V
jet modified for advanced research that will fly at altitudes between about
25,000 and 50,000 feet. Using spectrometers and other instruments on board,
the researchers will measure various chemicals and take air samples across
a wide region, both in storm clouds and far away from them. The
measurements will be analyzed in conjunction with data from the ATTREX
Global Hawk (covering altitudes up to 65,000 feet) and CAST BAe146 (with
observations from the ocean surface to about 20,000 feet).The researchers
are planning as many as 16 flights, targeting both towering storms that
loft fresh air into the stratosphere as well as collapsed storms to examine
the composition of the air that remains lower down, in the
troposphere.While the scientists will have considerable follow-up research
to do in their labs, some of the airborne instruments will provide
real-time measurements to the team. State-of-the-art models of atmospheric
chemistry will help guide the research flights in the field, as well as aid
in subsequent analysis of the observations."There will be a lot of
discovery and science in the field,” Pan said.

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