Shipborne and ground-based observations of clouds in the Southern Ocean ...

The Southern Ocean is characterised by sparse ground-based and in-situ atmospheric measurements. While satellite measurements provide continuous spatial and temporal coverage, they are generally not capable of observing low-level clouds and the cloud base, which are critical for accurately modelling...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kuma, Peter, McDonald, Adrian, Morgenstern, Olaf, Parsons, Simon, Varma, Vidya
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Zenodo 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3764268
https://zenodo.org/doi/10.5281/zenodo.3764268
Description
Summary:The Southern Ocean is characterised by sparse ground-based and in-situ atmospheric measurements. While satellite measurements provide continuous spatial and temporal coverage, they are generally not capable of observing low-level clouds and the cloud base, which are critical for accurately modelling radiative transfer. Results from general circulation models show significant biases in outgoing shortwave radiation in this region, believed to be related to deficiencies in representation of clouds, aerosols or their interaction. As part of the Cloud and Aerosol project of the New Zealand Deep South Challenge (DSC) we collected and analysed cloud measurements from multiple shipborne and ground-based deployments of several meteorological instruments: ceilometer, lidar, micro rain radar, radio soundings, aerosol sensors, sky cameras and UAV-borne sensors. With this combination of instruments we hope to advance understanding of cloud processes in this region, quantify model error compared to observations and ...