Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999

A number of recently published papers suggest that mountain-wave activity in the stratosphere, producing ice particles when temperatures drop below the ice frost point, may be the primary source of large NAT particles. In this paper we use measurements from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiomet...

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Main Authors: Pagan, Kathy L., Tabazadeh, Azadeh, Drdla, Katja, Hervig, Mark E., Eckermann, Stephen D., Browell, Edward V., Legg, Marion J., Foschi, Patricia G.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:unknown
Published: 2004
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46
Online Access:http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20100031887
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spelling ftnasantrs:oai:casi.ntrs.nasa.gov:20100031887 2023-05-15T14:58:46+02:00 Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999 Pagan, Kathy L. Tabazadeh, Azadeh Drdla, Katja Hervig, Mark E. Eckermann, Stephen D. Browell, Edward V. Legg, Marion J. Foschi, Patricia G. Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available Feb 26, 2004 http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20100031887 unknown http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20100031887 Copyright Other Sources 46 Journal of Geophysical Research; Volume 109 AD-A524963 2004 ftnasantrs 2012-04-21T23:20:40Z A number of recently published papers suggest that mountain-wave activity in the stratosphere, producing ice particles when temperatures drop below the ice frost point, may be the primary source of large NAT particles. In this paper we use measurements from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) instruments on board the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) polar-orbiting satellites to map out regions of ice clouds produced by stratospheric mountain-wave activity inside the Arctic vortex. Lidar observations from three DC-8 flights in early December 1999 show the presence of solid nitric acid (Type Ia or NAT) polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs). By using back trajectories and superimposing the position maps on the AVHRR cloud imagery products, we show that these observed NAT clouds could not have originated at locations of high-amplitude mountain-wave activity. We also show that mountain-wave PSC climatology data and Mountain Wave Forecast Model 2.0 (MWFM-2) raw hemispheric ray and grid box averaged hemispheric wave temperature amplitude hindcast data from the same time period are in agreement with the AVHRR data. Our results show that ice cloud formation in mountain waves cannot explain how at least three large scale NAT clouds were formed in the stratosphere in early December 1999. Other/Unknown Material Arctic NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)
op_collection_id ftnasantrs
language unknown
topic 46
spellingShingle 46
Pagan, Kathy L.
Tabazadeh, Azadeh
Drdla, Katja
Hervig, Mark E.
Eckermann, Stephen D.
Browell, Edward V.
Legg, Marion J.
Foschi, Patricia G.
Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999
topic_facet 46
description A number of recently published papers suggest that mountain-wave activity in the stratosphere, producing ice particles when temperatures drop below the ice frost point, may be the primary source of large NAT particles. In this paper we use measurements from the Advanced Very High Resolution Radiometer (AVHRR) instruments on board the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) polar-orbiting satellites to map out regions of ice clouds produced by stratospheric mountain-wave activity inside the Arctic vortex. Lidar observations from three DC-8 flights in early December 1999 show the presence of solid nitric acid (Type Ia or NAT) polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs). By using back trajectories and superimposing the position maps on the AVHRR cloud imagery products, we show that these observed NAT clouds could not have originated at locations of high-amplitude mountain-wave activity. We also show that mountain-wave PSC climatology data and Mountain Wave Forecast Model 2.0 (MWFM-2) raw hemispheric ray and grid box averaged hemispheric wave temperature amplitude hindcast data from the same time period are in agreement with the AVHRR data. Our results show that ice cloud formation in mountain waves cannot explain how at least three large scale NAT clouds were formed in the stratosphere in early December 1999.
format Other/Unknown Material
author Pagan, Kathy L.
Tabazadeh, Azadeh
Drdla, Katja
Hervig, Mark E.
Eckermann, Stephen D.
Browell, Edward V.
Legg, Marion J.
Foschi, Patricia G.
author_facet Pagan, Kathy L.
Tabazadeh, Azadeh
Drdla, Katja
Hervig, Mark E.
Eckermann, Stephen D.
Browell, Edward V.
Legg, Marion J.
Foschi, Patricia G.
author_sort Pagan, Kathy L.
title Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999
title_short Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999
title_full Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999
title_fullStr Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999
title_full_unstemmed Observational Evidence Against Mountain-Wave Generation of Ice Nuclei as a Prerequisite for the Formation of Three Solid Nitric Acid Polar Stratospheric Clouds Observed in the Arctic in Early December 1999
title_sort observational evidence against mountain-wave generation of ice nuclei as a prerequisite for the formation of three solid nitric acid polar stratospheric clouds observed in the arctic in early december 1999
publishDate 2004
url http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20100031887
op_coverage Unclassified, Unlimited, Publicly available
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
op_source Other Sources
op_relation http://ntrs.nasa.gov/search.jsp?R=20100031887
op_rights Copyright
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