Coordinated observations of the water cycle of marine cold-air outbreaks in the European Arctic during the ISLAS 2022 field campaign
International audience Marine cold-air outbreaks (mCAOs) are a characteristic type of high-impact weather in the European Arctic and are characterized by an intense water cycle where polar cloud processes play an important role. Model simulations and weather forecasts of mCAO events are challenging...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
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Other Authors: | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Conference Object |
Language: | English |
Published: |
HAL CCSD
2024
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://insu.hal.science/insu-04511787 https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-14866 |
Summary: | International audience Marine cold-air outbreaks (mCAOs) are a characteristic type of high-impact weather in the European Arctic and are characterized by an intense water cycle where polar cloud processes play an important role. Model simulations and weather forecasts of mCAO events are challenging and associated with poor predictability. One reason is that processes related to the water cycle interact with one another on a wide range of scales. In regional models, some of these processes are resolved and others are fully or partly parameterised. To test and improve numerical weather prediction models, additional observations and novel types of measurements of water vapour are highly demanded. Stable water isotopes are an increasingly available measurement, allowing to trace sub-grid scale processes, and providing the potential to constrain the mass budget of the atmospheric water cycle during mCAO events. During the ISLAS2022 field experiment (21 March to 10 April 2022), the stable isotope composition of water vapour and liquid samples, cloud structures, and other meteorological parameters were collected between Svalbard and Northern Scandinavia on various measurement platforms. Airborne survey flights to Svalbard provided the ocean evaporation signature and subsequent processing of water vapour during mCAO conditions. During a number of flights, mCAO airmasses were repeatedly sampled over a course of hours to days, allowing to characterize their thermodynamic evolution as clouds were first forming, then glaciating and precipitating. In addition, vapour isotope and sea water isotope measurements were taken continuously onboard R/V Helmer Hanssen between Tromsø and the Greenland west coast. Finally, coordinated land-based measurement activity over Northern Norway and Sweden allowed collection of precipitation samples, thus closing the mass budget of the mCAO events. Furthermore, using buoyancy-controlled meteorological balloons launched from Ny Ålesund, we additionally obtained continuous in-situ measurements ... |
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