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Albert Hertzog
,
Gillian Boccara
,
Robert A. Vincent
,
François Vial
, and
Philippe Cocquerez

Abstract

The stratospheric gravity wave field in the Southern Hemisphere is investigated by analyzing observations collected by 27 long-duration balloons that flew between September 2005 and February 2006 over Antarctica and the Southern Ocean. The analysis is based on the methods introduced by Boccara et al. in a companion paper. Special attention is given to deriving information useful to gravity wave drag parameterizations employed in atmospheric general circulation models. The balloon dataset is used to map the geographic variability of gravity wave momentum fluxes in the lower stratosphere. This flux distribution is found to be very heterogeneous with the largest time-averaged value (28 mPa) observed above the Antarctic Peninsula. This value exceeds by a factor of ∼10 the overall mean momentum flux measured during the balloon campaign. Zonal momentum fluxes were predominantly westward, whereas meridional momentum fluxes were equally northward and southward. A local enhancement of southward flux is nevertheless observed above Adélie Land and is attributed to waves generated by katabatic winds, for which the signature is otherwise rather small in the balloon observations. When zonal averages are performed, oceanic momentum fluxes are found to be of similar magnitude to continental values (2.5–3 mPa), stressing the importance of nonorographic gravity waves over oceans. Last, gravity wave intermittency is investigated. Mountain waves appear to be significantly more sporadic than waves observed above the ocean.

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Philippe Drobinski
,
Fatima Karbou
,
Peter Bauer
,
Philippe Cocquerez
,
Christophe Lavaysse
,
Terry Hock
,
David Parsons
,
Florence Rabier
,
Jean-Luc Redelsperger
, and
Stéphanie Vénel

Abstract

During the international African Monsoon Multidisciplinary Analysis (AMMA) project, stratospheric balloons carrying gondolas called driftsondes capable of dropping meteorological sondes were deployed over West Africa and the tropical Atlantic Ocean. The goals of the deployment were to test the technology and to study the African easterly waves, which are often the forerunners of hurricanes. Between 29 August and 22 September 2006, 124 sondes were dropped over the seven easterly waves that moved across Africa into the Atlantic between about 10° and 20°N, where almost no in situ vertical information exists. Conditions included waves that developed into Tropical Storm Florence and Hurricanes Gordon and Helene. In this study, a selection of numerical weather prediction model outputs has been compared with the dropsondes to assess the effect of some developments in data assimilation on the quality of analyses and forecasts. By comparing two different versions of the Action de Recherche Petite Echelle Grande Echelle (ARPEGE) model of Météo-France with the dropsondes, first the benefits of the last data assimilation updates are quantified. Then comparisons are carried out using the ARPEGE model and the Integrated Forecast System (IFS) model of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts. It is shown that the two models represent very well the vertical structure of temperature and humidity over both land and sea, and particularly within the Saharan air layer, which displays humidity below 5%–10%. Conversely, the models are less able to represent the vertical structure of the meridional wind. This problem seems to be common to ARPEGE and IFS, and its understanding still requires further investigations.

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Stephen A. Cohn
,
Terry Hock
,
Philippe Cocquerez
,
Junhong Wang
,
Florence Rabier
,
David Parsons
,
Patrick Harr
,
Chun-Chieh Wu
,
Philippe Drobinski
,
Fatima Karbou
,
Stéphanie Vénel
,
André Vargas
,
Nadia Fourrié
,
Nathalie Saint-Ramond
,
Vincent Guidard
,
Alexis Doerenbecher
,
Huang-Hsiung Hsu
,
Po-Hsiung Lin
,
Ming-Dah Chou
,
Jean-Luc Redelsperger
,
Charlie Martin
,
Jack Fox
,
Nick Potts
,
Kathryn Young
, and
Hal Cole

Constellations of driftsonde systems— gondolas floating in the stratosphere and able to release dropsondes upon command— have so far been used in three major field experiments from 2006 through 2010. With them, high-quality, high-resolution, in situ atmospheric profiles were made over extended periods in regions that are otherwise very difficult to observe. The measurements have unique value for verifying and evaluating numerical weather prediction models and global data assimilation systems; they can be a valuable resource to validate data from remote sensing instruments, especially on satellites, but also airborne or ground-based remote sensors. These applications for models and remote sensors result in a powerful combination for improving data assimilation systems. Driftsondes also can support process studies in otherwise difficult locations—for example, to study factors that control the development or decay of a tropical disturbance, or to investigate the lower boundary layer over the interior Antarctic continent. The driftsonde system is now a mature and robust observing system that can be combined with flight-level data to conduct multidisciplinary research at heights well above that reached by current research aircraft. In this article we describe the development and capabilities of the driftsonde system, the exemplary science resulting from its use to date, and some future applications.

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Albert Hertzog
,
Philippe Cocquerez
,
René Guilbon
,
Jean-Noël Valdivia
,
Stéphanie Venel
,
Claude Basdevant
,
Gillian Boccara
,
Jérôme Bordereau
,
Bernard Brioit
,
François Vial
,
Alain Cardonne
,
Alain Ravissot
, and
Éric Schmitt

Abstract

In September and October 2005, the Stratéole/Vorcore campaign flew 27 superpressure balloons from McMurdo, Antarctica, into the stratospheric polar vortex. Long-duration flights were successfully achieved, 16 of those flights lasting for more than 2 months. Most flights were terminated because they flew out of the authorized flight domain or because of energy shortage in the gondola. The atmospheric pressure (1-Pa precision) was measured every minute during the flights, whereas air temperature observations (0.25-K accuracy) and balloon positions (absolute GPS observations, 10-m accuracy) were obtained every 15 min. Fifteen-minute-averaged horizontal velocities of the wind were deduced from the successive balloon positions with a corresponding accuracy ≲0.1 m s−1. The collected dataset (more than 150 000 independent observations) provides a thorough high-resolution sampling of the polar lower stratosphere in the Southern Hemisphere from its wintertime state up to the establishment of the summer circulation in December–January. Most of the balloons stayed inside the vortex until its final breakdown, although a few were ejected toward the midlatitudes in November during filamention events associated with an increase in planetary wave activity. The balloons behaved as quasi-Lagrangian tracers during the first part of the campaign (quiescent vortex) and after the vortex breakdown in early December. Large-amplitude mountain gravity waves were detected over the Antarctic Peninsula and caused one flight termination associated with the sudden burst in the balloon superpressure.

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Florence Rabier
,
Steve Cohn
,
Philippe Cocquerez
,
Albert Hertzog
,
Linnea Avallone
,
Terry Deshler
,
Jennifer Haase
,
Terry Hock
,
Alexis Doerenbecher
,
Junhong Wang
,
Vincent Guidard
,
Jean-Noël Thépaut
,
Rolf Langland
,
Andrew Tangborn
,
Gianpaolo Balsamo
,
Eric Brun
,
David Parsons
,
Jérôme Bordereau
,
Carla Cardinali
,
François Danis
,
Jean-Pierre Escarnot
,
Nadia Fourrié
,
Ron Gelaro
,
Christophe Genthon
,
Kayo Ide
,
Lars Kalnajs
,
Charlie Martin
,
Louis-François Meunier
,
Jean-Marc Nicot
,
Tuuli Perttula
,
Nicholas Potts
,
Patrick Ragazzo
,
David Richardson
,
Sergio Sosa-Sesma
, and
André Vargas
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