Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia
In this study we examine the effect of natural perturbations on cirrus cloud cover in the tropics and we look for possible signal of cirrus contrails in tropical air traffic regions focussing on Southeast Asia, a region that has received much less attention than the well investigated North Atlantic...
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ftdoajarticles:oai:doaj.org/article:ca9a69e68761494bacf47b7373afe040 2023-05-15T17:36:46+02:00 Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia Christos S. Zerefos Kostas Eleftheratos Prodromos Zanis Dimitris S. Balis George Tselioudis 2007-01-01T00:00:00Z https://doaj.org/article/ca9a69e68761494bacf47b7373afe040 EN eng Springer http://tao.cgu.org.tw/images/attachments/v183p459.pdf https://doaj.org/toc/1017-0839 https://doaj.org/toc/2311-7680 1017-0839 2311-7680 10.3319/TAO.2007.18.3.459(EA) https://doaj.org/article/ca9a69e68761494bacf47b7373afe040 Terrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Vol 18, Iss 3, p 459 (2007) Cirrus clouds Cirrus contrails Trends Southeast Asia Geology QE1-996.5 Geophysics. Cosmic physics QC801-809 article 2007 ftdoajarticles 2022-12-30T22:23:28Z In this study we examine the effect of natural perturbations on cirrus cloud cover in the tropics and we look for possible signal of cirrus contrails in tropical air traffic regions focussing on Southeast Asia, a region that has received much less attention than the well investigated North Atlantic and North American air traffic corridors. The analysis is based on the latest version of the ISCCP D2 cirrus cloud dataset and covers the period 1984 - 2000. Four parameters were examined for their relation with cirrus cloud trends: deep convective clouds from ISCCP, vertical velocities, relative humidity and air temperature at 200 mb from ECMWF/ERA40. The results show that there is a strong correlation between cirrus clouds and dynamical parameters (deep convective clouds, vertical velocities) over Southeast Asia, explaining a significant part of the tropical cirrus cloud variability. After removing seasonality, the ENSO signal becomes dominant on cirrus, on deep convective clouds and on vertical velocities over regions of the western and the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Over Southeast Asia, the average decrease in cirrus during the strong 1997/98 El Nino event was about 6% cloud cover or ~25% of the regional mean. In order to search for possible signal of cirrus contrails over S. E. Asia, we calculated trends in cirrus coverage over tropical regions with high air traffic after removing the ENSO effect. The results show that there is a small positive trend in cirrus clouds over the S. E. Asia air corridors during winter (+0.1% cover/decade), which is not statistically significant and is related to small positive trends in deep convective clouds. In summer, cirrus clouds are anti-correlated with deep convective clouds over this region and the trends are opposite. The negative trends in cirrus clouds, which are observed in the summer (-4.5% cover/ decade), are related to trends in dynamical and thermo-dynamical parameters. It is shown that cirrus clouds are statistically significant correlated with vertical ... Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles Pacific |
institution |
Open Polar |
collection |
Directory of Open Access Journals: DOAJ Articles |
op_collection_id |
ftdoajarticles |
language |
English |
topic |
Cirrus clouds Cirrus contrails Trends Southeast Asia Geology QE1-996.5 Geophysics. Cosmic physics QC801-809 |
spellingShingle |
Cirrus clouds Cirrus contrails Trends Southeast Asia Geology QE1-996.5 Geophysics. Cosmic physics QC801-809 Christos S. Zerefos Kostas Eleftheratos Prodromos Zanis Dimitris S. Balis George Tselioudis Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia |
topic_facet |
Cirrus clouds Cirrus contrails Trends Southeast Asia Geology QE1-996.5 Geophysics. Cosmic physics QC801-809 |
description |
In this study we examine the effect of natural perturbations on cirrus cloud cover in the tropics and we look for possible signal of cirrus contrails in tropical air traffic regions focussing on Southeast Asia, a region that has received much less attention than the well investigated North Atlantic and North American air traffic corridors. The analysis is based on the latest version of the ISCCP D2 cirrus cloud dataset and covers the period 1984 - 2000. Four parameters were examined for their relation with cirrus cloud trends: deep convective clouds from ISCCP, vertical velocities, relative humidity and air temperature at 200 mb from ECMWF/ERA40. The results show that there is a strong correlation between cirrus clouds and dynamical parameters (deep convective clouds, vertical velocities) over Southeast Asia, explaining a significant part of the tropical cirrus cloud variability. After removing seasonality, the ENSO signal becomes dominant on cirrus, on deep convective clouds and on vertical velocities over regions of the western and the eastern tropical Pacific Ocean. Over Southeast Asia, the average decrease in cirrus during the strong 1997/98 El Nino event was about 6% cloud cover or ~25% of the regional mean. In order to search for possible signal of cirrus contrails over S. E. Asia, we calculated trends in cirrus coverage over tropical regions with high air traffic after removing the ENSO effect. The results show that there is a small positive trend in cirrus clouds over the S. E. Asia air corridors during winter (+0.1% cover/decade), which is not statistically significant and is related to small positive trends in deep convective clouds. In summer, cirrus clouds are anti-correlated with deep convective clouds over this region and the trends are opposite. The negative trends in cirrus clouds, which are observed in the summer (-4.5% cover/ decade), are related to trends in dynamical and thermo-dynamical parameters. It is shown that cirrus clouds are statistically significant correlated with vertical ... |
format |
Article in Journal/Newspaper |
author |
Christos S. Zerefos Kostas Eleftheratos Prodromos Zanis Dimitris S. Balis George Tselioudis |
author_facet |
Christos S. Zerefos Kostas Eleftheratos Prodromos Zanis Dimitris S. Balis George Tselioudis |
author_sort |
Christos S. Zerefos |
title |
Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia |
title_short |
Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia |
title_full |
Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia |
title_fullStr |
Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia |
title_full_unstemmed |
Search for Man-Made Cirrus Contrails over Southeast Asia |
title_sort |
search for man-made cirrus contrails over southeast asia |
publisher |
Springer |
publishDate |
2007 |
url |
https://doaj.org/article/ca9a69e68761494bacf47b7373afe040 |
geographic |
Pacific |
geographic_facet |
Pacific |
genre |
North Atlantic |
genre_facet |
North Atlantic |
op_source |
Terrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences, Vol 18, Iss 3, p 459 (2007) |
op_relation |
http://tao.cgu.org.tw/images/attachments/v183p459.pdf https://doaj.org/toc/1017-0839 https://doaj.org/toc/2311-7680 1017-0839 2311-7680 10.3319/TAO.2007.18.3.459(EA) https://doaj.org/article/ca9a69e68761494bacf47b7373afe040 |
_version_ |
1766136352248692736 |