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Christiane Voigt
,
Ulrich Schumann
,
Andreas Minikin
,
Ahmed Abdelmonem
,
Armin Afchine
,
Stephan Borrmann
,
Maxi Boettcher
,
Bernhard Buchholz
,
Luca Bugliaro
,
Anja Costa
,
Joachim Curtius
,
Maximilian Dollner
,
Andreas Dörnbrack
,
Volker Dreiling
,
Volker Ebert
,
Andre Ehrlich
,
Andreas Fix
,
Linda Forster
,
Fabian Frank
,
Daniel Fütterer
,
Andreas Giez
,
Kaspar Graf
,
Jens-Uwe Grooß
,
Silke Groß
,
Katharina Heimerl
,
Bernd Heinold
,
Tilman Hüneke
,
Emma Järvinen
,
Tina Jurkat
,
Stefan Kaufmann
,
Mareike Kenntner
,
Marcus Klingebiel
,
Thomas Klimach
,
Rebecca Kohl
,
Martina Krämer
,
Trismono Candra Krisna
,
Anna Luebke
,
Bernhard Mayer
,
Stephan Mertes
,
Sergej Molleker
,
Andreas Petzold
,
Klaus Pfeilsticker
,
Max Port
,
Markus Rapp
,
Philipp Reutter
,
Christian Rolf
,
Diana Rose
,
Daniel Sauer
,
Andreas Schäfler
,
Romy Schlage
,
Martin Schnaiter
,
Johannes Schneider
,
Nicole Spelten
,
Peter Spichtinger
,
Paul Stock
,
Adrian Walser
,
Ralf Weigel
,
Bernadett Weinzierl
,
Manfred Wendisch
,
Frank Werner
,
Heini Wernli
,
Martin Wirth
,
Andreas Zahn
,
Helmut Ziereis
, and
Martin Zöger

Abstract

The Midlatitude Cirrus experiment (ML-CIRRUS) deployed the High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO) to obtain new insights into nucleation, life cycle, and climate impact of natural cirrus and aircraft-induced contrail cirrus. Direct observations of cirrus properties and their variability are still incomplete, currently limiting our understanding of the clouds’ impact on climate. Also, dynamical effects on clouds and feedbacks are not adequately represented in today’s weather prediction models.

Here, we present the rationale, objectives, and selected scientific highlights of ML-CIRRUS using the G-550 aircraft of the German atmospheric science community. The first combined in situ–remote sensing cloud mission with HALO united state-of-the-art cloud probes, a lidar and novel ice residual, aerosol, trace gas, and radiation instrumentation. The aircraft observations were accompanied by remote sensing from satellite and ground and by numerical simulations.

In spring 2014, HALO performed 16 flights above Europe with a focus on anthropogenic contrail cirrus and midlatitude cirrus induced by frontal systems including warm conveyor belts and other dynamical regimes (jet streams, mountain waves, and convection). Highlights from ML-CIRRUS include 1) new observations of microphysical and radiative cirrus properties and their variability in meteorological regimes typical for midlatitudes, 2) insights into occurrence of in situ–formed and lifted liquid-origin cirrus, 3) validation of cloud forecasts and satellite products, 4) assessment of contrail predictability, and 5) direct observations of contrail cirrus and their distinction from natural cirrus. Hence, ML-CIRRUS provides a comprehensive dataset on cirrus in the densely populated European midlatitudes with the scope to enhance our understanding of cirrus clouds and their role for climate and weather.

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Hermann Oelhaf
,
Björn-Martin Sinnhuber
,
Wolfgang Woiwode
,
Harald Bönisch
,
Heiko Bozem
,
Andreas Engel
,
Andreas Fix
,
Felix Friedl-Vallon
,
Jens-Uwe Grooß
,
Peter Hoor
,
Sören Johansson
,
Tina Jurkat-Witschas
,
Stefan Kaufmann
,
Martina Krämer
,
Jens Krause
,
Erik Kretschmer
,
Dominique Lörks
,
Andreas Marsing
,
Johannes Orphal
,
Klaus Pfeilsticker
,
Michael Pitts
,
Lamont Poole
,
Peter Preusse
,
Markus Rapp
,
Martin Riese
,
Christian Rolf
,
Jörn Ungermann
,
Christiane Voigt
,
C. Michael Volk
,
Martin Wirth
,
Andreas Zahn
, and
Helmut Ziereis

Abstract

The Polar Stratosphere in a Changing Climate (POLSTRACC) mission employed the German High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO). The payload comprised an innovative combination of remote sensing and in situ instruments. The in situ instruments provided high-resolution observations of cirrus and polar stratospheric clouds (PSCs), a large number of reactive and long-lived trace gases, and temperature at the aircraft level. Information above and underneath the aircraft level was achieved by remote sensing instruments as well as dropsondes. The mission took place from 8 December 2015 to 18 March 2016, covering the extremely cold late December to early February period and the time around the major warming in the beginning of March. In 18 scientific deployments, 156 flight hours were conducted, covering latitudes from 25° to 87°N and maximum altitudes of almost 15 km, and reaching potential temperature levels of up to 410 K. Highlights of results include 1) new aspects of transport and mixing in the Arctic upper troposphere–lower stratosphere (UTLS), 2) detailed analyses of special dynamical features such as tropopause folds, 3) observations of extended PSCs reaching sometimes down to HALO flight levels at 13–14 km, 4) observations of particulate NOy and vertical redistribution of gas-phase NOy in the lowermost stratosphere (LMS), 5) significant chlorine activation and deactivation in the LMS along with halogen source gas observations, and 6) the partitioning and budgets of reactive chlorine and bromine along with a detailed study of the efficiency of ClOx/BrOx ozone loss cycle. Finally, we quantify—based on our results—the ozone loss in the 2015/16 winter and address the question of how extraordinary this Arctic winter was.

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Andreas Schäfler
,
George Craig
,
Heini Wernli
,
Philippe Arbogast
,
James D. Doyle
,
Ron McTaggart-Cowan
,
John Methven
,
Gwendal Rivière
,
Felix Ament
,
Maxi Boettcher
,
Martina Bramberger
,
Quitterie Cazenave
,
Richard Cotton
,
Susanne Crewell
,
Julien Delanoë
,
Andreas Dörnbrack
,
André Ehrlich
,
Florian Ewald
,
Andreas Fix
,
Christian M. Grams
,
Suzanne L. Gray
,
Hans Grob
,
Silke Groß
,
Martin Hagen
,
Ben Harvey
,
Lutz Hirsch
,
Marek Jacob
,
Tobias Kölling
,
Heike Konow
,
Christian Lemmerz
,
Oliver Lux
,
Linus Magnusson
,
Bernhard Mayer
,
Mario Mech
,
Richard Moore
,
Jacques Pelon
,
Julian Quinting
,
Stephan Rahm
,
Markus Rapp
,
Marc Rautenhaus
,
Oliver Reitebuch
,
Carolyn A. Reynolds
,
Harald Sodemann
,
Thomas Spengler
,
Geraint Vaughan
,
Manfred Wendisch
,
Martin Wirth
,
Benjamin Witschas
,
Kevin Wolf
, and
Tobias Zinner

Abstract

The North Atlantic Waveguide and Downstream Impact Experiment (NAWDEX) explored the impact of diabatic processes on disturbances of the jet stream and their influence on downstream high-impact weather through the deployment of four research aircraft, each with a sophisticated set of remote sensing and in situ instruments, and coordinated with a suite of ground-based measurements. A total of 49 research flights were performed, including, for the first time, coordinated flights of the four aircraft: the German High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO), the Deutsches Zentrum für Luft- und Raumfahrt (DLR) Dassault Falcon 20, the French Service des Avions Français Instrumentés pour la Recherche en Environnement (SAFIRE) Falcon 20, and the British Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements (FAAM) BAe 146. The observation period from 17 September to 22 October 2016 with frequently occurring extratropical and tropical cyclones was ideal for investigating midlatitude weather over the North Atlantic. NAWDEX featured three sequences of upstream triggers of waveguide disturbances, as well as their dynamic interaction with the jet stream, subsequent development, and eventual downstream weather impact on Europe. Examples are presented to highlight the wealth of phenomena that were sampled, the comprehensive coverage, and the multifaceted nature of the measurements. This unique dataset forms the basis for future case studies and detailed evaluations of weather and climate predictions to improve our understanding of diabatic influences on Rossby waves and the downstream impacts of weather systems affecting Europe.

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Manfred Wendisch
,
Ulrich Pöschl
,
Meinrat O. Andreae
,
Luiz A. T. Machado
,
Rachel Albrecht
,
Hans Schlager
,
Daniel Rosenfeld
,
Scot T. Martin
,
Ahmed Abdelmonem
,
Armin Afchine
,
Alessandro C. Araùjo
,
Paulo Artaxo
,
Heinfried Aufmhoff
,
Henrique M. J. Barbosa
,
Stephan Borrmann
,
Ramon Braga
,
Bernhard Buchholz
,
Micael Amore Cecchini
,
Anja Costa
,
Joachim Curtius
,
Maximilian Dollner
,
Marcel Dorf
,
Volker Dreiling
,
Volker Ebert
,
André Ehrlich
,
Florian Ewald
,
Gilberto Fisch
,
Andreas Fix
,
Fabian Frank
,
Daniel Fütterer
,
Christopher Heckl
,
Fabian Heidelberg
,
Tilman Hüneke
,
Evelyn Jäkel
,
Emma Järvinen
,
Tina Jurkat
,
Sandra Kanter
,
Udo Kästner
,
Mareike Kenntner
,
Jürgen Kesselmeier
,
Thomas Klimach
,
Matthias Knecht
,
Rebecca Kohl
,
Tobias Kölling
,
Martina Krämer
,
Mira Krüger
,
Trismono Candra Krisna
,
Jost V. Lavric
,
Karla Longo
,
Christoph Mahnke
,
Antonio O. Manzi
,
Bernhard Mayer
,
Stephan Mertes
,
Andreas Minikin
,
Sergej Molleker
,
Steffen Münch
,
Björn Nillius
,
Klaus Pfeilsticker
,
Christopher Pöhlker
,
Anke Roiger
,
Diana Rose
,
Dagmar Rosenow
,
Daniel Sauer
,
Martin Schnaiter
,
Johannes Schneider
,
Christiane Schulz
,
Rodrigo A. F. de Souza
,
Antonio Spanu
,
Paul Stock
,
Daniel Vila
,
Christiane Voigt
,
Adrian Walser
,
David Walter
,
Ralf Weigel
,
Bernadett Weinzierl
,
Frank Werner
,
Marcia A. Yamasoe
,
Helmut Ziereis
,
Tobias Zinner
, and
Martin Zöger

Abstract

Between 1 September and 4 October 2014, a combined airborne and ground-based measurement campaign was conducted to study tropical deep convective clouds over the Brazilian Amazon rain forest. The new German research aircraft, High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft (HALO), a modified Gulfstream G550, and extensive ground-based instrumentation were deployed in and near Manaus (State of Amazonas). The campaign was part of the German–Brazilian Aerosol, Cloud, Precipitation, and Radiation Interactions and Dynamics of Convective Cloud Systems–Cloud Processes of the Main Precipitation Systems in Brazil: A Contribution to Cloud Resolving Modeling and to the GPM (Global Precipitation Measurement) (ACRIDICON– CHUVA) venture to quantify aerosol–cloud–precipitation interactions and their thermodynamic, dynamic, and radiative effects by in situ and remote sensing measurements over Amazonia. The ACRIDICON–CHUVA field observations were carried out in cooperation with the second intensive operating period of Green Ocean Amazon 2014/15 (GoAmazon2014/5). In this paper we focus on the airborne data measured on HALO, which was equipped with about 30 in situ and remote sensing instruments for meteorological, trace gas, aerosol, cloud, precipitation, and spectral solar radiation measurements. Fourteen research flights with a total duration of 96 flight hours were performed. Five scientific topics were pursued: 1) cloud vertical evolution and life cycle (cloud profiling), 2) cloud processing of aerosol particles and trace gases (inflow and outflow), 3) satellite and radar validation (cloud products), 4) vertical transport and mixing (tracer experiment), and 5) cloud formation over forested/deforested areas. Data were collected in near-pristine atmospheric conditions and in environments polluted by biomass burning and urban emissions. The paper presents a general introduction of the ACRIDICON– CHUVA campaign (motivation and addressed research topics) and of HALO with its extensive instrument package, as well as a presentation of a few selected measurement results acquired during the flights for some selected scientific topics.

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