Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds

A tethered-balloon system (TBS) has been developed and is being operated by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) on behalf of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) User Facility in order to collect in situ atmospheric measurements within mixed-phase Arctic cloud...

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Main Authors: Darielle Dexheimer, Martin Airey, Erika Roesler, Casey Longbottom, Keri Nicoll, Stefan Kneifel, Fan Mei, R. Giles Harrison, Graeme Marlton, Paul D. Williams
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2022
Subjects:
Online Access:https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:fa36ec85601d80bb11dacee8ce764c9b01d86fffd764741c791c24bfa78e68f6
id dataone:sha256:fa36ec85601d80bb11dacee8ce764c9b01d86fffd764741c791c24bfa78e68f6
record_format openpolar
spelling dataone:sha256:fa36ec85601d80bb11dacee8ce764c9b01d86fffd764741c791c24bfa78e68f6 2024-06-03T18:46:37+00:00 Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds Darielle Dexheimer Martin Airey Erika Roesler Casey Longbottom Keri Nicoll Stefan Kneifel Fan Mei R. Giles Harrison Graeme Marlton Paul D. Williams BEGINDATE: 2016-05-13T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-08-09T00:00:00Z 2022-08-15T22:29:38.497Z https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:fa36ec85601d80bb11dacee8ce764c9b01d86fffd764741c791c24bfa78e68f6 unknown Arctic tethered balloon fiber optic distributed temperature sensing Dataset 2022 dataone:urn:node:HYDROSHARE 2024-06-03T18:18:39Z A tethered-balloon system (TBS) has been developed and is being operated by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) on behalf of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) User Facility in order to collect in situ atmospheric measurements within mixed-phase Arctic clouds. Periodic tethered-balloon flights have been conducted since 2015 within restricted airspace at ARM’s Advanced Mobile Facility 3 (AMF3) in Oliktok Point, Alaska, as part of the AALCO (Aerial Assessment of Liquid in Clouds at Oliktok), ERASMUS (Evaluation of Routine Atmospheric Sounding Measurements using Unmanned Systems), and POPEYE (Profiling at Oliktok Point to Enhance YOPP Experiments) field campaigns. The tethered-balloon system uses helium-filled 34 m3 helikites and 79 and 104 m3 aerostats to suspend instrumentation that is used to measure aerosol particle size distributions, temperature, horizontal wind, pressure, relative humidity, turbulence, and cloud particle properties and to calibrate ground-based remote sensing instruments. Supercooled liquid water content (SLWC) sondes using the vibrating-wire principle, developed by Anasphere Inc., were operated at Oliktok Point at multiple altitudes on the TBS within mixed-phase clouds for over 200 h. Sondecollected SLWC data were compared with liquid water content derived from a microwave radiometer, Ka-band ARM zenith radar, and ceilometer at the AMF3, as well as liquid water content derived from AMF3 radiosonde flights. The in situ data collected by the Anasphere sensors were also compared with data collected simultaneously by an alternative SLWC sensor developed at the University of Reading, UK; both vibrating-wire instruments were typically observed to shed their ice quickly upon exiting the cloud or reaching maximum ice loading. Temperature sensing measurements distributed with fiber optic tethered balloons were also compared with AMF3 radiosonde temperature measurements. Combined, the results indicate that TBSdistributed temperature sensing and supercooled liquid water measurements are in reasonably good agreement with remote sensing and radiosonde-based measurements of both properties. From these measurements and sensor evaluations, tethered-balloon flights are shown to offer an effective method of collecting data to inform and constrain numerical models, calibrate and validate remote sensing instruments, and characterize the flight environment of unmanned aircraft, circumventing the difficulties of in-cloud unmanned aircraft flights such as limited flight time and inflight icing. Data collected with CTEMPs DTS available upon request from ctemps@unr.edu. Dataset Arctic Alaska Unknown Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection Unknown
op_collection_id dataone:urn:node:HYDROSHARE
language unknown
topic Arctic
tethered balloon
fiber optic distributed temperature sensing
spellingShingle Arctic
tethered balloon
fiber optic distributed temperature sensing
Darielle Dexheimer
Martin Airey
Erika Roesler
Casey Longbottom
Keri Nicoll
Stefan Kneifel
Fan Mei
R. Giles Harrison
Graeme Marlton
Paul D. Williams
Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds
topic_facet Arctic
tethered balloon
fiber optic distributed temperature sensing
description A tethered-balloon system (TBS) has been developed and is being operated by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) on behalf of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) User Facility in order to collect in situ atmospheric measurements within mixed-phase Arctic clouds. Periodic tethered-balloon flights have been conducted since 2015 within restricted airspace at ARM’s Advanced Mobile Facility 3 (AMF3) in Oliktok Point, Alaska, as part of the AALCO (Aerial Assessment of Liquid in Clouds at Oliktok), ERASMUS (Evaluation of Routine Atmospheric Sounding Measurements using Unmanned Systems), and POPEYE (Profiling at Oliktok Point to Enhance YOPP Experiments) field campaigns. The tethered-balloon system uses helium-filled 34 m3 helikites and 79 and 104 m3 aerostats to suspend instrumentation that is used to measure aerosol particle size distributions, temperature, horizontal wind, pressure, relative humidity, turbulence, and cloud particle properties and to calibrate ground-based remote sensing instruments. Supercooled liquid water content (SLWC) sondes using the vibrating-wire principle, developed by Anasphere Inc., were operated at Oliktok Point at multiple altitudes on the TBS within mixed-phase clouds for over 200 h. Sondecollected SLWC data were compared with liquid water content derived from a microwave radiometer, Ka-band ARM zenith radar, and ceilometer at the AMF3, as well as liquid water content derived from AMF3 radiosonde flights. The in situ data collected by the Anasphere sensors were also compared with data collected simultaneously by an alternative SLWC sensor developed at the University of Reading, UK; both vibrating-wire instruments were typically observed to shed their ice quickly upon exiting the cloud or reaching maximum ice loading. Temperature sensing measurements distributed with fiber optic tethered balloons were also compared with AMF3 radiosonde temperature measurements. Combined, the results indicate that TBSdistributed temperature sensing and supercooled liquid water measurements are in reasonably good agreement with remote sensing and radiosonde-based measurements of both properties. From these measurements and sensor evaluations, tethered-balloon flights are shown to offer an effective method of collecting data to inform and constrain numerical models, calibrate and validate remote sensing instruments, and characterize the flight environment of unmanned aircraft, circumventing the difficulties of in-cloud unmanned aircraft flights such as limited flight time and inflight icing. Data collected with CTEMPs DTS available upon request from ctemps@unr.edu.
format Dataset
author Darielle Dexheimer
Martin Airey
Erika Roesler
Casey Longbottom
Keri Nicoll
Stefan Kneifel
Fan Mei
R. Giles Harrison
Graeme Marlton
Paul D. Williams
author_facet Darielle Dexheimer
Martin Airey
Erika Roesler
Casey Longbottom
Keri Nicoll
Stefan Kneifel
Fan Mei
R. Giles Harrison
Graeme Marlton
Paul D. Williams
author_sort Darielle Dexheimer
title Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds
title_short Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds
title_full Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds
title_fullStr Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds
title_sort evaluation of arm tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase arctic clouds
publishDate 2022
url https://search.dataone.org/view/sha256:fa36ec85601d80bb11dacee8ce764c9b01d86fffd764741c791c24bfa78e68f6
op_coverage BEGINDATE: 2016-05-13T00:00:00Z ENDDATE: 2017-08-09T00:00:00Z
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Alaska
genre_facet Arctic
Alaska
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