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  • Aerosol optical properties from searchlight measurements; AerosolSearchlight_WhiteSands; Agung; searchlight; SSiRC; stratospheric aerosols; Stratospheric Sulfur and its Role in Climate; tropospheric aerosols; Volcanic aerosol  (1)
  • Sublimation  (1)
Document type
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  • 1
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Boundary layer meteorology 97 (2000), S. 109-135 
    ISSN: 1573-1472
    Keywords: Blowing snow ; Diffusion coefficient ; Intercomparison ; Sublimation ; Suspension
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract Four one-dimensional, time-dependent blowing snow models areintercompared. These include three spectral models, PIEKTUK-T,WINDBLAST, SNOWSTORM, and the bulk version of PIEKTUK-T,PIEKTUK-B. Although the four models are based on common physicalconcepts, they have been developed by different research groups. Thestructure of the models, numerical methods, meteorological field treatmentand the parameterization schemes may be different. Under an agreed standardcondition, the four models generally give similar results for the thermodynamic effects of blowing snow sublimation on the atmospheric boundary layer, including an increase of relative humidity and a decrease of the ambient temperature due to blowing snow sublimation. Relative humidity predicted by SNOWSTORM is lower than the predictions of the other models, which leads to a larger sublimation rate in SNOWSTORM. All four models demonstrate that sublimation rates in a column of blowing snow have a single maximum in time, illustrating self-limitation of the sublimation process of blowing snow. However, estimation of the eddy diffusioncoefficient for momentum (Km), and thereby the diffusion coefficients for moisture (Kw) and for heat (Kh), has a significant influence on the process. Sensitivitytests with PIEKTUK-T show that the sublimation rate can be approximately constant with time after an initial phase, if Km is a linear function with height. In order to match the model results with blowing snow observations, some parameters in the standard run, such as settling velocity of blowing snow particles in these models, may need to be changed to more practical values.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2023-08-05
    Description: The datasets consist of rescued and recalibrated tropospheric and stratospheric aerosol extinction profiles (β_p (z)) measured at New Mexico, US, (32°47'N, 105°49'W) between December 1963 and December 1964, after the 1963 Agung volcanic eruption (Antuña-Marrero et al., 2022). Measurements were conducted with a searchlight, the lidar predecessor. The rescue procedure re-digitized the 105 original β_p (z) plots (β_p^Orig (z)) from a research report (Elterman, 1966). The recalibration procedure began with the inversion of the original equation used to compute β_p (z) (Elterman, 1966) to retrieve the normalized detector response profiles for each one of the 105 digitized β_p^Orig (z) profiles. Then the cited equation was used in straight form to compute the recalibrated β_p^Orig (z) profiles (β_p^Recal (z)) replacing several of the variables it includes by their updated versions. These include: 1) The molecular extinction profile, replacing the US Standard Atmosphere 1962 with the corresponding daily local sounding nearby; 2) The molecular and aerosol transmissions, replaced with calculations using the MODTRAN (MODerate resolution atmospheric TRANsmission) code in transmission mode; and 3) The aerosol phase function, substituting the one calculated from measurements at the surface in Germany and applied for the entire 2.76 to 35.2 km column, with, for the troposphere, 2.76 to 10.7 km, the AERONET aerosol phase function from White Sands High Energy Laser Systems Test Facility (HELSTF), and for the stratosphere, 11.2 - 35.2 km, the aerosol phase function calculated from a set of particle size distributions measured by the ER-2 in the vicinity of White Sands in early 1964. Errors were estimated taking as a reference the errors determined in the computation of β_p^Orig (z).
    Keywords: Aerosol optical properties from searchlight measurements; AerosolSearchlight_WhiteSands; Agung; searchlight; SSiRC; stratospheric aerosols; Stratospheric Sulfur and its Role in Climate; tropospheric aerosols; Volcanic aerosol
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 4 datasets
    Location Call Number Limitation Availability
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