AN OVERVIEW AND PRELIMINARY RESULTS FROM THE ARCTIC AIRBORNE MEASUREMENT PROGRAM 1998 CAMPAIGN

The Arctic Airborne Measurement Program (AAMP) was planned to investigate the transport, exchange and chemical processes of gas and aerosol in the Arctic atmosphere in early spring, and further to understand their roles in global change. An instrumented aircraft, Gulfstream II (G-II) twin-jet plane,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: シオバラ マサタカ, フジイ ヨシユキ, モリモト シンジ, アスマ ヨシオ, ヤマガタ サダム, スガワラ サトシ, イノマタ ヤヨイ, ワタナベ マサハル, マチダ トシノブ, Masataka SHIOBARA, Yoshiyuki FUJII, Shinji MORIMOTO, Yoshio ASUMA, Sadamu YAMAGATA, Satoshi SUGAWARA, Yayoi INOMATA, Masaharu WATANABE, Toshinobu MACHIDA
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: Scientific Note 1999
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Online Access:https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/?action=repository_uri&item_id=2894
http://id.nii.ac.jp/1291/00002894/
https://nipr.repo.nii.ac.jp/?action=repository_action_common_download&item_id=2894&item_no=1&attribute_id=18&file_no=1
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Summary:The Arctic Airborne Measurement Program (AAMP) was planned to investigate the transport, exchange and chemical processes of gas and aerosol in the Arctic atmosphere in early spring, and further to understand their roles in global change. An instrumented aircraft, Gulfstream II (G-II) twin-jet plane, was used for airborne measurements in the troposphere and lower stratosphere of the Arctic. For the AAMP 1998 campaign, G-II was equipped with CO_2 and O_3 concentration monitor systems, gas and aerosol sampling systems, aerosol particle counters, and the PMS 1D and 2D airborne particle probes. The aircraft was flown from Alaska, USA to Svalbard, Norway passing over the North Pole, and on the reverse route, in the first half of March 1998. The approximate cruising altitude was 12km for long-range flights. Vertical profiles of gas and aerosol concentrations were obtained over Spitsbergen, Svalbard and Barrow, Alaska. A convective cloud system associated with a polar low was observed over the Norwegian Sea. Another cloud observation was made for marine boundary layer clouds over the open sea off Spitsbergen. Most of the instruments on-board G-II worked well, and measurements were successfully acquired during the AAMP 1998 campaign.