A High-Altitude Long-Range Aircraft Configured as a Cloud Observatory: The NARVAL Expeditions

Bjorn Stevens Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

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Felix Ament Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany

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Sandrine Bony Sorbonne University, LMD/IPSL, CNRS, Paris, France

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Susanne Crewell University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany

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Florian Ewald Institute for Physics of the Atmosphere, (DLR) Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

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Silke Gross Institute for Physics of the Atmosphere, (DLR) Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

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Akio Hansen Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany

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Lutz Hirsch Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

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Marek Jacob University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany

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Tobias Kölling Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich, Munich, Germany

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Heike Konow Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany

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Bernhard Mayer Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich, Munich, Germany

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Manfred Wendisch University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

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Martin Wirth Institute for Physics of the Atmosphere, (DLR) Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

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Kevin Wolf University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

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Stephan Bakan Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

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Matthias Bauer-Pfundstein Metek GmbH, Elmshorn, Germany

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Matthias Brueck Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

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Julien Delanoë LATMOS/IPSL/UVSQ/CNRS, Guyancourt, and Sorbonne University, Paris, France

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André Ehrlich University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

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David Farrell Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology, Bridgetown, Barbados

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Marvin Forde Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology, Bridgetown, Barbados

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Felix Gödde Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich, Munich, Germany

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Hans Grob Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich, Munich, Germany

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Martin Hagen Institute for Physics of the Atmosphere, (DLR) Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

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Evelyn Jäkel University of Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

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Friedhelm Jansen Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

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Christian Klepp Universität Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany

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Marcus Klingebiel Max Planck Institute for Meteorology, Hamburg, Germany

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Mario Mech University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany

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Gerhard Peters Metek GmbH, Elmshorn, Germany

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Markus Rapp Institute for Physics of the Atmosphere, (DLR) Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany

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Allison A. Wing Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida

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Tobias Zinner Ludwig-Maximilians University of Munich, Munich, Germany

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Abstract

A configuration of the High-Altitude Long-Range Research Aircraft (HALO) as a remote sensing cloud observatory is described, and its use is illustrated with results from the first and second Next-Generation Aircraft Remote Sensing for Validation (NARVAL) field studies. Measurements from the second NARVAL (NARVAL2) are used to highlight the ability of HALO, when configured in this fashion, to characterize not only the distribution of water condensate in the atmosphere, but also its impact on radiant energy transfer and the covarying large-scale meteorological conditions—including the large-scale velocity field and its vertical component. The NARVAL campaigns with HALO demonstrate the potential of airborne cloud observatories to address long-standing riddles in studies of the coupling between clouds and circulation and are helping to motivate a new generation of field studies.

© 2019 American Meteorological Society. For information regarding reuse of this content and general copyright information, consult the AMS Copyright Policy (www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses).

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Bjorn Stevens, bjorn.stevens@mpimet.mpg.de

Abstract

A configuration of the High-Altitude Long-Range Research Aircraft (HALO) as a remote sensing cloud observatory is described, and its use is illustrated with results from the first and second Next-Generation Aircraft Remote Sensing for Validation (NARVAL) field studies. Measurements from the second NARVAL (NARVAL2) are used to highlight the ability of HALO, when configured in this fashion, to characterize not only the distribution of water condensate in the atmosphere, but also its impact on radiant energy transfer and the covarying large-scale meteorological conditions—including the large-scale velocity field and its vertical component. The NARVAL campaigns with HALO demonstrate the potential of airborne cloud observatories to address long-standing riddles in studies of the coupling between clouds and circulation and are helping to motivate a new generation of field studies.

© 2019 American Meteorological Society. For information regarding reuse of this content and general copyright information, consult the AMS Copyright Policy (www.ametsoc.org/PUBSReuseLicenses).

CORRESPONDING AUTHOR: Bjorn Stevens, bjorn.stevens@mpimet.mpg.de

Using dropsondes and advanced remote sensing instrumentation, the German High-Altitude Long-Range Research Aircraft (HALO) is configured for use as an airborne cloud observatory.

The application of aircraft to sample the atmo- sphere continues a long tradition—one dignified by luminaries such as Pascal and Humboldt—of humans reaching into the atmosphere to measure its properties. Today’s research aircraft are able to carry large payloads over large distances and to a great altitude, taking them from their early beginnings as airborne observatories (e.g., Anderson 1931; Malkus et al. 1961), and transforming them into sophisticated laboratories (e.g., Wofsy et al. 2011; Wendisch et al. 2016). Measurements made in such laboratories have helped to characterize the distribution of water condensate, particulate matter, and trace gases in the troposphere and lower stratosphere.

Today, satellites (Stephens et al. 2002; Illingworth et al. 2015) and ground stations (Ackerman and Stokes 2003; Illingworth et al. 2007; Stevens et al. 2016) remotely sense quantities that used to require measurements in situ, by airborne laboratories. These modern ground- and space-based observatories have many advantages, but are limited to sampling what passes by, which makes their measurements challenging to contextualize. Remote sensing instrumentation is, however, also well suited for airborne applications. For instance, airborne radars have been used extensively for research purposes for decades (e.g., Mapes and Houze 1995), and aircraft have long served as platforms for prototyping and validating satellite measurements. But the use of research aircraft as flying laboratories—designed to sample the flow in situ—continues to dominate their application. Here we articulate a different vision, one in which modern remote sensing techniques help reestablish airborne platforms as sophisticated flying observatories. By combining the mobility of a research aircraft with simple autonomous sensors (dropsondes) and advanced remote sensing, we show how such platforms make it possible, for the first time, to simultaneously observe the large-scale and constituent properties of the atmosphere in space and time, and in otherwise difficult to access locations. This capability enables a new look at atmospheric processes, and gives a modern twist to the century-old application of aircraft in atmospheric research.

The idea of using a research aircraft as a platform for autonomous and remote sensing emerged with the procurement of a Gulfstream 550 for the use of the German atmospheric science research community. Together with its sister aircraft, the National Science Foundation–National Center for Atmospheric Research (NSF–NCAR) High-Performance Instrumented Airborne Platform for Environmental Research (Cooper et al. 1989; Laursen et al. 2006), the German Gulfstream 550 (G550) distinguishes itself from many research aircraft available for use today by its ability to fly at high (15 km) altitude, for long distances (8,000 km), all the while carrying a large payload. These qualities are reflected in its name: High-Altitude Long-Range Research Aircraft (HALO), an acronym constructed to emphasize its high-altitude and long-range capabilities. In addition to the traditional use of the aircraft, to characterize clouds and the chemical state of the atmosphere, a configuration was proposed to facilitate HALO’s use to validate new high-tech satellite remote sensing applications. With the growing appreciation of the capability of low-tech parachute-borne dropsondes to constrain the large-scale state of the atmosphere, a more comprehensive vision for the use of HALO developed. The purpose of this article is to describe the realization of this vision through the course of the Next-Generation Aircraft Remote Sensing for Validation (NARVAL)1 expeditions.

HALO CONFIGURED AS A CLOUD OBSERVATORY.

Configured as a cloud observatory, HALO uses complementary active and passive sensors to measure radiant energy across the electromagnetic spectrum. Combined with in situ measurements from dropsondes, these sensors enable a characterization of the thermodynamic (temperature and water vapor), dynamic (large-scale winds and vertical velocity), and particulate (hydrometeors, clouds, and aerosols) state of the atmosphere over the area of flight operations. Figure 1 illustrates this configuration of HALO. All instruments, except for the broadband radiometers and infrared imager discussed at the end of this article, have been used in at least one of the NARVAL expeditions.

Fig. 1.
Fig. 1.

Cross section of HALO configured as a cloud observatory. Detail shows two positions with major instrumentation in the belly pod and in the tail section. SMART and specMACS are both passive instruments making measurements with high spectral resolution at visible and near-infrared wavelengths.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

In the microwave part of the electromagnetic spectrum, three downward-looking radiometer modules passively measure the microwave emissions of Earth’s atmosphere in 26 channels probing two water vapor and two oxygen absorption features, as well as window channels (Table 1). The configuration of radiometers was initially chosen to mimic those found aboard, or planned for, major European satellites, such as the Meteorological Operational satellites (MetOp), as well as microwave measurements made by the Special Sensor Microwave Imager (SSM/I), Global Precipitation Measurement (GPM) Microwave Imager (GMI), Advanced Microwave Sounding Unit A and B (AMSU-A,B), and Advanced Microwave Scanning Radiometer (AMSR).2 The radiometer modules (see Fig. 1, position a) are nadir staring, with beam widths of 2.7° to 5.0° and a sampling rate of about 1 s. This implies a surface footprint from HALO typically less than 1.0 km, and at most 1.5 km. The channels provide the capability of distinguishing contributions from different condensate phases of water, and providing their path integrals. In addition, the bandpass channels yield sensitivity to different depths within the atmosphere and, thereby, provide profiling capabilities (Schnitt et al. 2017).

Table 1.

Frequencies measured by downward-looking radiometer modules within HAMP. Indicated are the major constituent lines sampled and the retrievals to which the particular measurements most contribute.

Table 1.

An active nadir-pointing microwave cloud and precipitation radar (Fig. 1, position c) complements the passive microwave measurements. The radar measures in the water vapor window at a frequency of 35.5 GHz (Ka band). This system, similar to cloud radars operated on the Barbados Cloud Observatory since 2010 (Stevens et al. 2016), is operated with a 200-ns pulse length and a pulse repetition frequency of 5 kHz. Two receivers provide co- and cross-polarization reflectivity measurements. The output parameters are the first two moments of the Doppler spectrum, which include the reflectivity and the reflectivity-weighted Doppler velocity. In addition, the linear-depolarization ratio provides information about the target shape. The radar uses a monostatic, pulsed magnetron that enables it to precisely capture strong gradients in the reflectivity, which is important to avoid problems with ground reflection. The high-power (30-kW peak) and relatively large, for an airborne system, (1 m) Cassegrain antenna gives it a higher-than-average sensitivity (–30.7 dBZ at 5 km) as compared to lower-powered W-band (90 GHz) airborne systems (Ewald et al. 2019). Radiation in the Ka band also attenuates less than in the W band, so that Ka-band radars can better penetrate columns with heavy precipitation.3

In the visible and near-infrared portion of the spectrum, two types of instruments provide passive measurements. The Spectral Modular Airborne Radiation Measurement System (SMART; Wendisch et al. 2001, 2016) measures spectral irradiances (and radiances) from two implementations. One is a zenith-oriented sensor, which measures downwelling irradiances, from position e in Fig. 1. At position f, a second, nadir-staring SMART measures both radiances and irradiances upwelling toward the aircraft from below. SMART measurements in the visible and near-infrared (300 to 1,000 nm) wavelength range have a 2- to 3-nm spectral resolution [full width half maximum (FWHM)]. Measurements in the shortwave infrared span the range from 1,000 to 2,200 nm, with a 10- to 15-nm spectral resolution (FWHM). Radiance and irradiance data collected by SMART help quantify the presence and microphysical state of clouds. Upwelling radiances can also inform retrievals of surface properties. These are obtained from a telescope with an opening angle of about 2°, and its time resolution varies between 0.5 and 4 s, giving it an along-path resolution of 150 m at a range of 15 km.

The spectrometer of the Munich Aerosol Cloud Scanner (specMACS; Ewald et al. 2016) is the second type of passive instrument operating in the near-infrared and visible portion of the spectrum. SpecMACS consists of two camera systems, one in the visible/near-infrared (400 to 1,000 nm), and another in the shortwave infrared (1,000 to 2,500 nm). The systems produce a spectrally resolved line image with 1,312 pixels covering a 32.7° field of view in the visible/near-infrared, and with 320 pixels covering a 35.5° field of view in the shortwave infrared. The resolution of the instrument is limited by the field of view associated with individual pixels of the sensor, which in the shortwave infrared range is about 2 mrad. This allows the instrument to resolve 30-m surface features along a line of 8.7 km at a flight altitude of 15 km. During the first NARVAL (NARVAL1), specMACS had not yet been incorporated into the HALO payload, and instead an alternative instrument for performing differential optical absorption spectroscopy was operated from the rear of the fuselage.

Active remote sensing in the same frequency range is provided by the multiwavelength water vapor differential absorption lidar (WALES; Wirth et al. 2009). WALES operates at four wavelengths near 935 nm to measure water vapor mixing ratio profiles covering the whole atmosphere below the aircraft, and is located between the two components of HAMP in position b (Fig. 1). At typical flight speeds it has a resolution of 200 m in the vertical and 6 km in the horizontal. The system also contains additional aerosol channels at 532 and 1,064 nm with depolarization. WALES uses a high-spectral-resolution technique, which distinguishes molecular from particle backscatter, to make direct extinction measurements with a resolution of 15 m in the vertical and 200 m in the horizontal. A detailed description of the WALES system is provided by Wirth et al. (2009).

The remote sensing systems are complemented by a dropsonde capability, whereby HALO is equipped to launch Vaisala RD-94 sondes using an “Airborne Vertical Atmospheric Profiling System” (Hock and Franklin 1999). As reported by Wang et al. (2015), the sondes measure temperature with an accuracy of 0.2°C, humidity with an accuracy of 2% RH, and pressure with an accuracy of 0.4 hPa. Winds are derived from GPS measurements with an estimated accuracy of 0.1 m s–1. During the NARVAL campaigns the receiver could track four sondes simultaneously. For the measured descent time of about 750 s from a drop altitude of 9.5 km, the capability of the receiver allows a sonde to be launched roughly every three and a half minutes.

THE NARVAL EXPEDITIONS.

The cloud observatory configuration of HALO has mostly been developed and evaluated through two NARVAL expeditions. NARVAL1 consisted of 15 research flights: 8 during December 2013 over the winter trades of the tropical North Atlantic and 7 during January 2014 over the storm tracks of the extratropical North Atlantic. The second NARVAL (NARVAL2) consisted of 10 research flights during August 2016 in and around the western extension of the Atlantic intertropical convergence zone (Fig. 2). Shortly after NARVAL2, HALO (with the NARVAL payload) took part in the North Atlantic Waveguide Downstream Experiment (NAWDEX) mission, flying again over the extratropical storm-track region of the North Atlantic (Schäfler et al. 2018). The tropical flights were motivated by the desire to provide spatial context for ongoing ground-based measurements at the Barbados Cloud Observatory, which was established to test cloud-feedback hypotheses (Stevens et al. 2016). The capabilities of HALO as a cloud observatory are highlighted through a presentation of the sixth research flight (RF06) of NARVAL2 because in addition to the extensive complement of remote sensing, which was common to all NARVAL flights, it was one of two flights which extensively explored new methods of measuring large-scale vertical velocity using a high density of dropsonde measurements.

Fig. 2.
Fig. 2.

Distribution of sonde launches for NARVAL1 (Dec 2013, Jan 2014) and NARVAL2 (Aug 2016) flights. Shaded is the position of the ITCZ and the storm-track region (blue) in Dec 2013 and the ITCZ (red) in Aug 2016. The ITCZ is defined to be regions with precipitation greater than 9 mm day–1, the storm tracks by the regions with precipitation greater than 6 mm day–1. The boundaries of these regions are smoothed before plotting.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

A synopsis of all NARVAL flights is provided in Table 2, and the location of dropsonde measurements among the different campaigns is show in Fig. 2. The relative proximity of many of the NARVAL2 flights to the ITCZ, as compared to the NARVAL1 tropical flights, is evident. Over the 25 flights composing NARVAL1 and NARVAL2, 329 dropsondes were launched, and 15 A-Train underpasses were flown in a variety of conditions. Further details for specific flights are provided by Klepp et al. (2015), for NARVAL1, and from flight reports for NARVAL2.

Table 2.

Overview of NARVAL research flights. RF denotes the research flight for each campaign, No. denotes the number of dropsondes launched, and AO denotes A-Train overpass time when applicable.

Table 2.

CHARACTERIZING CLOUDS.

An understanding of how clouds interact with their environment requires an ability to quantify how water condensate is distributed through the atmosphere, and to measure the dynamic and thermodynamic properties of the atmosphere in which the clouds are embedded. This is necessary to both test hypotheses as to how clouds are controlled by their environment (Bony et al. 2017) and to evaluate a new generation of models that begin to resolve cloud-scale circulations over large domains and in realistic circumstances (Miyamoto et al. 2013; Klocke et al. 2017). Critical observational tests of these models are rare (cf. Stevens and Lenschow 2001). Despite numerous measurement campaigns, the quantification of stratocumulus entrainment from the Second Dynamics and Chemistry of the Marine Stratocumulus field study (DYCOMS II) measurements (Stevens et al. 2003, 2005) is the only example of such a test of which we are aware.

Cloud condensate.

An unambiguous measure of a cloudiness, and something a cloud observatory should be able to quantify, is the amount of water condensate in the atmosphere. In the lower atmosphere this is measured by the liquid water path (LWP). Liquid water from clouds and precipitation emit a warm signal in contrast to the radiatively cold ocean in the microwave part of the electromagnetic spectrum. With such a clear signal, satellite microwave measurements (made now for 30 years) provide the only real climatological information on LWP. Recently, Elsaesser et al. (2017) published the first multisensor climatology of LWP. However, with footprints of a few tens of kilometers, satellite retrievals are susceptible to beamfilling issues and assumptions in the partitioning between cloud and rainwater (Seethala and Horváth 2010; Greenwald et al. 2018), which combine uncertainties arising from a poorly constrained background and make the retrievals uncertain.

The relatively narrow field of view of the passive and active microwave (HAMP) instruments, which can even be screened for any fractional cloud cover using high-resolution imagery by specMACS, makes them well suited to retrieve distributions of cloud condensate. This advantage of the HALO measurements, as compared to satellite remote sensing, is illustrated by Fig. 3. It shows retrievals from the HALO-borne microwave radiometers for two flight segments during RF06. These coincide with AMSR2 (Figs. 3a,b) and GMI (Figs. 3c,d) overpasses. The figure presents, in plan view, the satellite-retrieved LWP fields (Figs. 3a,c), and compares these to the HALO retrievals along the flight track (Figs. 3b,d). The HALO measurements demonstrate the ability of HAMP to detect very low (50 g m–2) LWP, even detecting clouds that are only barely detected by the radar (e.g., around 1640 UTC in Fig. 3b). By using the lidar signal to identify clear skies, a determination of the noise characteristics of HAMP allows for more precise estimates of cloud water. This helps bound retrievals of LWP from clouds whose signal is too small to rise above the background microwave noise, yet which are still reliably detected by optical instruments. In the cases when drizzle or rain is present (e.g., at 1930 UTC in Fig. 3d), it will be measured by the radar. This makes it possible to establish the relative contribution of the rainwater to the total retrieved LWP (Schnitt et al. 2017).

Fig. 3.
Fig. 3.

Exemplary LWP time series of about 10 min illustrating the intermittent nature of the typical liquid clouds encountered during NARVAL2, RF06. (a),(c) The flight track superimposed on the large-scale LWP field as derived from microwave measurements associated with satellite overpasses separated in time by about 4.5 h. (b),(d) The aircraft-derived LWP for the flight segments shown in (a) and (c), respectively. Two satellite products are shown for reference, one from the GMI, the other from the Multisensor Advanced Climatology of Liquid Water Path (MAC-LWP; Elsaesser et al. 2017). Cloud radar profiles shown classify the AMSR-E underflight in (b) as nonprecipitating while the GMI underflight in (d) includes several rain shafts. Note that due to the time difference to GMI the system is shifted in space. The time period between 1642 and 1645 UTC is highlighted in (b) as it is discussed in subsequent analysis.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

The type of multisensor synergy employed in HALO has also been used for spaceborne instruments. Greenwald et al. (2018) estimate the various uncertainty factors for microwave satellite LWP, using Moderate Resolution Imaging Spectroradiometer (MODIS) as ground truth and CloudSat to identify precipitation. Over the tropical oceans they found the net bias, in some cases, to be more than 50% of the mean LWP. The much finer-scale NARVAL measurements, which include a MODIS-type LWP retrieval (as discussed below), allow a more in-depth investigation of these uncertainties. Even at these finer scales, however, cloud inhomogeneities often violate the assumptions used in many retrievals (see the sidebar “Cloud geometric effects on microphysical retrievals”), but here at least, the ability to view a cloud through many lenses offers opportunities to selectively perform the retrievals on clouds, or cloud segments, that best satisfy the assumptions of the underlying retrievals.

CLOUD GEOMETRIC EFFECTS ON MICROPHYSICAL RETRIEVALS

Retrievals of cloud optical and microphysical properties from reflected radiances (Nakajima and King 1990) are designed for horizontally uniform unbounded clouds, and for a good reason: cloud boundaries, and inhomogeneity more generally, bias retrievals in ways that are difficult to correct. So how big does an otherwise homogeneous cloud have to be for its microphysical properties to be accurately retrieved using the methods described in the text? To answer this question, we performed a simple numerical experiment using a radiative transfer code that quantifies three-dimensional effects, the Monte Carlo code for the physically correct tracing of photons in cloudy atmospheres (MYSTIC; Mayer 2009). We consider virtual observations of an idealized cylindrical cloud of diameter d and vertical extent 500 m (Fig. SB1, top). Cloud microphysical properties were chosen as typical for trade wind cumulus clouds, and assumed to be uniform throughout the cloud.

Fig. SB1.
Fig. SB1.

Simulated retrieval for an idealized 1- and 4-km-diameter cylindrical cloud. Retrievals are presented for two sun incidence angles, on a scale normalized by the cloud diameter. For both clouds the depth is the same and cloud microphysical properties are idealized as following monodisperse droplet distribution with ql = 0.35 gm–3 and Nd = 84 cm–3. The idealizations help isolate the impact of cloud geometric effects on remotely sensed properties.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

Even before performing any retrieval, a simple comparison of the reflected radiation with that expected for a plane-parallel cloud (black lines) reveals large biases near cloud edges—which for a small cloud is everywhere. In the example, with high sun (0° solar zenith angle) these biases arise because of the loss of radiation through the cloud sides, which causes reflectivity deficits that (for clouds on the kilometer scale) reach well into the center of the cloud. At lower sun angles photons can be scattered into the field of view causing the clouds to appear brighter than they would otherwise be expected to be. To quantify these geometric effects, a simple two wavelengths (0.8 and 2.1 µm) retrieval was developed, consisting of a dense lookup table of radiance pairs as a function of ql and re. By design the retrieval works perfectly for homogeneous, unbounded, plane-parallel clouds. Here we show what happens for bounded clouds, whereby geometric effects from cloud edges lead to large biases that extend well into the cloud. For the case of the 1-km cloud, even at the center of the cloud these geometric effects lead to a substantial underestimation of ql. Retrievals of re are less impacted, which is beneficial for Nd as it is proportional to re–3. Even so, Nd is substantially underestimated across the entirety of the cloud for small clouds at high noon.

At the ends of the day geometric effects become even more challenging for retrievals. Repeating the calculations for a lower (60°) sun angle shows that errors no longer compensate. On the sunward side of the cloud ql is overestimated while re is underestimated. Errors of the opposite sense are evident on the dark side of the cloud. Because these effects are nonlinear they can still be quite large even when averaged across the cloud. This simple example shows that to determine meaningful values for Nd it is necessary to concentrate on the centers of the larger clouds, where “large” means considerably larger than 1 km. Even then, it is important to mind the gaps and stay well away from cloud edges. To be able to do that, high-resolution, two-dimensional images are required, as provided by specMACS (Fig. 5). Such images can help assess the magnitude of the 3D effects for each individual case, taking into account sun and cloud geometry, and including information from instruments which are less affected by 3D radiative transfer, such as the microwave radiometer and the active instruments.

Fig. 5.
Fig. 5.

Cloud scene from NARVAL2 RF06 flight segment outlined in Fig. 3a. (a) The backscatter ratio (WALES) at 532 nm, (b) the specMACS measurements at 1,597 nm with the field of view of other instruments (HAMP radiometer, SMART, and HAMP radar) outlined, and (c) cloud masks along the path for WALES, specMACS, SMART, and the radar with total cloud fraction along segment included on the right margin. No cloud mask is given for HAMP, but its field of view is shown in anticipation of subsequent analysis. For specMACS the fractional cloud cover across the swath from ±1° around nadir is shown. To simulate a sensor with lower resolution and higher sensitivity, specMACS 1/0 shows a binary version of that fraction, counting a time step as cloudy if just a single pixel (from ±1° around nadir) detected a cloud.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

An example of the synergies between radar and lidar (see the sidebar “Synergistic use of radar and lidar to derive ice cloud microphysical properties”) is the use of radar and lidar to perform ice water content retrievals even in regions of the cloud where the cloud is only visible to one instrument. These retrievals underpin the attractiveness of the “cloud observatory” configuration of HALO for satellite calibration and validation studies.

SYNERGISTIC USE OF RADAR AND LIDAR TO DERIVE ICE CLOUD MICROPHYSICAL PROPERTIES

Due to their wavelength differences, lidar and cloud radar measurements are sensitive to different particle sizes. Their measurements of aerosol and cloud layers are thus complementary. The radar, sensitive to large particles, provides information on optically thick clouds (water clouds and thick ice clouds) and precipitation. For these thicker clouds the lidar has only very limited penetration depth and so does not see very far into the clouds. By virtue of its sensitivity to small particles, the lidar provides information on aerosols, optically thin ice clouds, or shallow water clouds which the radar is not sensitive to and in some cases does not see at all. Figure SB2 illustrates the complementary sensitivity of these two instruments from measurements for an ice cloud measured during the HALO flight on 16 December 2013. The lidar (Fig. SB2a) images more of the cloud area, as the radar (Fig. SB2b) is only sensitive to regions of higher ice water content.

Fig. SB2.
Fig. SB2.

Collocated (a) backscatter ratio measured with the WALES lidar system and (b) radar reflectivity measured with the HAMP cloud radar between 2000 and 2100 UTC 16 Dec 2013 (RF06 of the NARVAL1 tropical flights), and (c) ice water content retrieved with the variational optimal estimation approach.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

Having the two instruments mounted on a common platform makes it easier to ensure the coincidence of their respective measurements, and thus get the most out of retrievals. For instance, whereas retrievals based on the ratio of the lidar backscatter coefficient to the radar reflectivity are limited to regions where both measurements overlap, optimal estimation approaches can retrieve ice cloud microphysical properties (e.g., effective radius and ice water content) also when in parts of the cloud seen by only one instrument. This is shown in Fig. SB2c, using the variational optimal estimation approach introduced by Delanoë and Hogan (2008) and adapted to our multiwavelength aircraft applications by Cazenave et al. (2018, manuscript submitted to Atmos. Meas. Tech. Discuss.). Ice water measurements are retrieved in the upper part of the clouds which are transparent to the radar. These types of measurements help us look toward forthcoming satellite missions. Notably the European Space Agency–Japan Aerospace Exploration Agency (ESA–JAXA) Earth Cloud Aerosol Radiation Experiment (EarthCARE) will operate an advanced lidar and cloud radar system from a single satellite platform, and is well poised to benefit from the retrievals we develop and test using data form the NARVAL expeditions.

The meteorological environment.

Dropsondes were used during NARVAL2 to characterize the thermodynamic environment in which clouds form. The flight pattern in RF06, as shown in Fig. 4a, highlights new techniques developed during NARVAL2 to test the ability of dropsonde measurements to also constrain the cloud dynamic environment.

Fig. 4.
Fig. 4.

(a) MODIS image at the time of the A-Train overpass during RF06. The MODIS overpass is indicated in red (for the time period between 1642 and 1645 UTC; Fig. 3b) and is bracketed by pairs of circular flight patterns designed to facilitate estimates of large-scale vertical motion from dropsonde wind measurements. (b),(c) Large-scale vertical velocity as derived from these sounding circles are illustrated, adapted from Bony and Stevens (2019).

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

NARVAL2 tested whether a suitable deployment of dropsondes could meaningfully constrain the large-scale vorticity and divergence of the horizontal wind (Bony and Stevens 2019) whereby the large-scale vertical wind is given by the integral of the divergence. The method was evaluated through repeated measurements in pairs of circular flight patterns over the same air mass, by comparing results to storm-resolving simulations, and by independent measures of the vertical component of the wind velocity—for instance by Lagrangian tracking of water vapor features. Two pairs of circles were flown to test the method in RF03 and RF06. Bony and Stevens (2019) showed that reasonably accurate estimates of the vertical velocity (see Figs. 4b,c) can be reconstructed from around 12 sondes dropped over an area of around 1.5° × 1.5°. The measurements show the capability of providing detailed information on the finescale vertical structure of the horizontal-wind divergence, and even from as few as six to eight strategically dropped sondes, useful information on the structure of the large-scale wind can be inferred.

It is informative to compare the vertical motion estimates from the sondes (Fig. 4) with LWP derived from satellite measurements. At the time of the AMSR2 overpass, the first pair of circles (in the southwest) had been flown, mostly subtending an area characterized by the low values of AMSR2-retrieved LWP evident south of 15°N in Fig. 3a. A substantially greater LWP is evident in the second set of circles, that is, as seen in the GMI-retrieved LWP (Fig. 3c). In both cases this is consistent with the measurements of the vertical component of the large-scale wind. In the first pair of circles low-level divergence of the horizontal wind and large-scale descent (Fig. 4b) was measured. For the second set of circles (Fig. 4b) low-level convergence of the horizontal wind and large-scale ascent was measured.

Being able to measure the mean vertical velocity over a large (1° to 3°) area determines the convergence of mass, moisture, and enthalpy over this same area. Hence, this example shows how the thermodynamic and dynamic budgets of the area being surveyed by HALO can be determined at the same time as the remote sensing characterizes the cloud field.

Cloud coverage.

Clouds are often characterized by their coverage. This measure of cloudiness is desirable because it helps inform how condensate is distributed in space, which is important for understanding how clouds interact with radiation. Cloud coverage is, however, a poorly defined measure of cloudiness, as it requires that a continuous envelope (a cloud) be fit to what in the end is a dispersion of discrete objects (cloud particles). This distinction can have surprisingly large quantitative consequences, (e.g., Koren et al. 2007). Nonetheless, the concept of a cloud fraction proves difficult to dispense with. The remote sensing instrumentation on HALO makes it possible to estimate cloud coverage from a number of sensors. Figure 5 illustrates different estimates of cloud amount as seen along a subset of the flight path illustrated in Figs. 3a and 3b. Shown is a scene of three minutes duration, as measured from an altitude of 9 km. Figure 5a shows the vertical profile delivered from the lidar, and Fig. 5b provides a specMACS image. The entire scene is roughly commensurate with the size of a microwave satellite footprint. Overlaid are the fields of view from different sensors. Figure 5c shows cloud masks of the sensors with the corresponding numerical value of cloud fraction on the right. The dependence of cloud amount on the sensor chosen is another example of the power of the synergistic approach. In combination, the different sensitivities of active and passive techniques can better characterize the statistics of the condensate distribution. Whereas the microwave techniques are more sensitive to liquid water and precipitation associated with more substantial clouds, the optical techniques yield more accurate cloud-cover statistics, including very thin and small clouds. The conservative estimates of clear skies provided by these instruments, for instance WALES, SMART, and specMACS, can then be used to quantify the noise characteristics of the other instruments, thus improving their retrieval.

Cloud microphysical properties.

Another important and challenging cloud property to measure is Nd, the cloud droplet population density; Nd is indicative of the aerosol environment in which clouds form, something that is necessary to quantify when assessing the strength of aerosol–cloud interactions (Grosvenor et al. 2018). Here, because it provides an example of the synergy across instruments and the advantages of the very high-resolution measurements HALO enables, we explore retrievals of Nd in more detail.

By combining SMART measurements with constraints from other sensors it is possible to infer Nd along with other microphysical properties of clouds. The principle of the technique follows the lookup table approach developed for satellite retrievals (Nakajima and King 1990; Werner et al. 2013), whereby the optical depth τ and effective radius of water droplets at cloud-top re are retrieved, from which Nd can then be inferred using the model described by Boers and Mitchell (1994). Their model assumes that i) Nd is constant above cloud base; ii) that cloud droplets are gamma distributed in size, with a constant and known shape parameter α; and iii) that the liquid water content ql increases with height in proportion to its adiabatic value γl. The adiabatic liquid water lapse-rate γl is a thermodynamic quantity. For fair-weather clouds in the tropics it is about 2.2 g kg–1 km–1, with a dependence on pressure and temperature (Rieck et al. 2012). As clouds are usually subadiabatic in ql, an empirical correction is applied. Previous measurements of shallow trade wind convection justify a height-independent correction factor of β = 0.6. As clouds deepen beyond a few hundred meters, precipitation begins to develop, and the cloud droplet size distribution broadens (vanZanten et al. 2011); likewise, the assumption of constant β increasingly fails as clouds deepen beyond about 500 m.

The requirements for the retrieval mentioned above will not be satisfied for all cloud cases. In fact, estimating Nd in broken clouds using remote sensing is a kind of Goldilocks problem. Clouds that are too small will have their retrievals biased from geometric effects (see the sidebar “Cloud geometric effects on microphysical retrievals”), increasingly so at low sun angles. Clouds that are too large increasingly depart from the idealization of being nonprecipitating. By adding information from the other passive and active remote sensing instruments it becomes possible to selectively pick clouds that are large enough but not too large, and also derive constraints on the mixing parameter β—for instance, by comparing microwave-based LWP measurements to that expected given cloud geometry. In addition, using independent LWP measurements from a combined spectrometer–microwave retrieval of re may further constrain the retrievals.

As described in more detail by Wolf et al. (2019), three methods were developed to estimate Nd. Method A retrieves only τ and re using only SMART. For method B the SMART-retrieved τ is replaced by the HAMP-retrieved LWP value. Method C uses full information about the cloud geometry obtained from the WALES and cloud radar measurements.

Following the theoretical study shown in the sidebar “Cloud geometric effects on microphysical retrievals,” cloud element size is of central importance for the reliability of passive retrievals in the typical NARVAL cloud situations. This is facilitated by a careful cloud screening (e.g., using specMACS 2D data). The typical cloud element is a few hundred meters to a few kilometers in diameter. Effects of horizontal loss of radiation through the nearby cloud boundaries will always be present to some extent. In Fig. 6 showing the SMART retrievals it is thus likely that τ860 is biased to small values and re to large values. This would also explain the observed difference between HAMP and SMART LWP values. Based on these considerations the true Nd values are likely to be at the upper end of the retrieved range of 60 cm–1. This value appears plausible given in situ measurements from previous field campaigns in the same region (vanZanten et al. 2011; Siebert et al. 2013), but more work is clearly warranted.

Fig. 6.
Fig. 6.

Time series of SMART radiances and synergistic retrievals for 3-min scene in Fig. 5. (a) Radiances at 860 and 1,600 nm, (b) retrieved optical depth at 860 nm, (c) retrieved effective radius near cloud top and associated (1σ) uncertainty, (d) LWP from SMART and HAMP retrievals with propagated uncertainty, and (e) estimation of droplet population density Nd using different combinations of sensors (methods A, B, and C) as explained in text and with propagated uncertainty (dashed).

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

Precipitation.

Radar-derived precipitation measurements can be used to understand when clouds develop in ways that come into conflict with assumptions underpinning the microphysical retrievals discussed above. These measurements can also provide a critical characterization of cloud microphysical evolution, and a basis for evaluating models, or testing hypothesized aerosol–cloud interactions (Lonitz et al. 2015).

As an example of the capability of HALO to observe precipitation processes, and their relationship to other cloud properties, a simple first analysis of the precipitation statistics during the NARVAL expeditions was performed. An echo object was defined as precipitating if the echo extended below the lifting condensation level (as derived from the nearest dropsonde). For example, the cloud objects detected by the radar in Fig. 3b would be characterized as nonprecipitating, while those in Fig. 3d would be characterized as precipitating. Overall only about 20% of the echoes are identified as precipitating, which given the sensitivity –31 dBZ (at 5 km) sensitivity of the radar (see Fig. 5) implies that precipitation is associated with an even smaller fraction of clouds.

This analysis suggests that once clouds deepen beyond about 700 m their chance of forming rain increases fourfold. This is shown in Fig. 7a, which presents the probability of precipitation in different vigintiles of the cloud-depth distribution. Unlike cloud depth, cloud-top height is a poor indicator of precipitation, as many thin high clouds do not precipitate (Fig. 7b). The best indicator of precipitation is the maximum reflectivity in an echo object, as almost all clouds with a maximum reflectivity larger than –15 dBZ have echoes that extend to the surface. The synergistic sensor approach, which for instance allows the simultaneous probing of cloud microstructure and condensate path, might help answer why, even when clouds deepen sufficiently, not all form precipitation. That so many do suggests that as far as the microphysical retrievals are concerned, it may be challenging to find a Goldilocks cloud.

Fig. 7.
Fig. 7.

Rank histograms, in vigintiles, of cloud properties as defined by the HAMP cloud and precipitation radar. Cumulative distribution in rank order (lines; corresponding to left-axis scale) and precipitation probability p(P) (bars; measured on right). (a) Rank cloud depth, as measured by distance between lifting condensation level and echo top; (b) echo top; and (c) maximum object reflectivity. The cumulative distribution lines are colored according to whether the object is identified as raining or not. The precipitation probabilities thus show the fraction of blue (raining) vs total points in each vigintile.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

LARGE-DOMAIN LARGE-EDDY SIMULATION.

In the past few years it has become possible to apply the large-eddy simulation (LES) technique, once restricted to idealized situations, to realistic domains on the scale of several hundred to even a thousand kilometers (Heinze et al. 2017). In support of the NARVAL expeditions, simulations using the Icosahedral Nonhydrostatic (ICON) model (Zängl et al. 2015; Dipankar et al. 2015) with a 2,500-m mesh—spanning the entire tropical Atlantic and much of tropical Africa and South America—were initialized each day at 0000 UTC and ran forward in time for 36 h (Klocke et al. 2017). Over a large area of the western Atlantic a finer, 1,250-m mesh was nested for each of the simulations. This configuration of ICON can be run in real time to aid flight planning.

Finer-resolution (Δx = 155 m) simulations were also performed for 12 of the NARVAL research flights, 6 each from NARVAL1 and NARVAL2 (see Table 2). Figure 8 illustrates the simulation protocol and domains, whereby three layers of further nesting are applied to the 1,250-m mesh, which results in a 155-m mesh simulation over an area (150 km × 400 km). The fixed computational domains were chosen to best overlap with areas of flight operations. Simulations on the hectometer scale begin to explicitly represent cloud and convective processes of even shallow clouds. By simulating the scales of motion that HALO measures, we can assess the quality of the model, and its assumptions, and at the same time provide a virtual database for testing sampling strategies and retrieval assumptions that are being applied to HALO’s observations.

Fig. 8.
Fig. 8.

Nesting procedure to simulate area of flight operations during NARVAL. Starting from the interior 1.25-km nest of yet larger-scale simulations on a 2.5-km mesh, a three-step nesting procedure is applied to simulate the area of flight operations on a 150-m mesh. To enable spinup the simulations are initialized several hours before flight operations and integrated through the period of active measurements.

Citation: Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 100, 6; 10.1175/BAMS-D-18-0198.1

LOOKING FORWARD.

One obvious shortcoming of HALO’s remote sensing payload during the NARVAL expeditions was the lack of measurements covering wavelengths in the thermal infrared. Both upward and downward solar broadband irradiances can be derived from the spectrally resolved SMART sensors, but as far as the thermal infrared wavelength region is concerned, HALO was flying blind. As foreshadowed in Fig. 1, the remaining mount points on the aircraft will be used in the future to address this blind spot. Future expeditions will additionally include an infrared imager measuring at 7.7 and 12 µm—wavelengths associated with strong differential absorption changes from water condensate, which will help to retrieve cloud properties and phase. Measuring at a wavelength in the atmospheric window will make it possible to derive sea surface temperature in clear-sky conditions. The measurements will also complement lidar and O2 A-band-based cloud-top height estimates. In addition, upward and downward broadband irradiances will be measured in both the thermal infrared and solar part of the spectrum. Future missions should also benefit from ongoing modifications to reduce the integration time of the microwave radiometers and to improve the sensitivity of the radar. These changes will allow both instruments to even better resolve clouds. Finally, a new dropsonde receiver will, through an ability to track eight sondes at once, allow a denser deployment of dropsondes.

The application of HALO as a flying cloud observatory is planned as a central component of two forthcoming field studies: Elucidating the Role of Coupling among Clouds, Convection and Circulation (EUREC4A) and HALO Arctic Amplification: Climate Relevant Atmospheric and Surface Processes, and Feedback Mechanisms [HALO-(AC)3]. As part of EUREC4A, HALO will be paired with a low-flying aircraft, the Aerei da Trasporto Regionale 42 (ATR-42), that is configured to better quantify the mass budget of the subcloud layer and cloudiness near cloud base (Bony et al. 2017). In situ measurements of clouds by the ATR-42 will help improve retrievals of microphysical properties of clouds using the HALO remote sensing. As part of the (AC)3 the HALO cloud observatory will investigate mixed-phase cloud processes in the Arctic by measuring cloud transformations accompanying the large-scale meridional airmass movements (warm air intrusions, cold air outbreaks). To do so a Lagrangian approach will be adopted, which is made possible by virtue of HALO’s endurance (Wendisch et al. 2017).

Together with the example application discussed above these campaigns illustrate the integrative aspects of “airborne observatories,” as they link scales, platforms, and communities in pursuit of scientific progress. Airborne observatories link scales by providing observations directly at the scales of interest for cloud–circulation coupling (i.e., large-scale vertical motion and small-scale cloud processes and dynamics) and for modeling. They link platforms because they are both “low-flying satellites” and “flying ground-based observatories,” which makes it possible to connect and evaluate satellite, ground-based, and in situ measurements. Finally they link communities. Not only do these types of campaigns bring together high-resolution modeling of precisely those scales and processes that are observed, thereby enhancing the bandwidth between simulation and observational science, but they also provide a platform for engaging young scientists in remote regions of the world in efforts to probe the atmosphere. As such, HALO as a flying cloud observatory also serves as an ambassador for atmospheric and climate science.

By fully embracing the power of remote and autonomous sensing, the cloud observatory configuration of HALO shows how, by using just a single aircraft, it should be possible to target measurements of atmospheric water (in all its phases) and its interaction with circulation systems in ways that were not previously possible. Such measurements can help advance understanding of how the atmosphere works, identify processes which regulate its distribution of clouds, and test an emerging new generation of weather prediction and climate models.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This work was supported by the Max Planck Society, the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG; German Research Foundation) through the HALO Priority Program SPP 1294, “Atmospheric and Earth System Research with the Research Aircraft HALO (High Altitude and Long Range Research Aircraft)” and the European Research Council (ERC) project EUREC4A (Grant Agreement 694768) of the EU’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme. The Department of Civil Aviation in Barbados, Andrea Hausold, Katrin Witte, and the FX department of the DLR is thanked for their support of both projects. Norbert Noreiks is thanked for his help in drafting Fig. 1. We thank the editor, Cynthia Twohy, and two anonymous reviewers for their constructive input. AMSR2 and GMI data are produced by Remote Sensing Systems and were sponsored by the NASA AMSR-E Science Team and the NASA Earth Science funding. AMSR2, version 8, and GMI, version 8.2, data products were retrieved online (www.remss.com).

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  • Stevens, B., and Coauthors, 2016: The Barbados Cloud Observatory: Anchoring investigations of clouds and circulation on the edge of the ITCZ. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 97, 787801, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00247.1.

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    • Export Citation
  • Stephens, G. L., and Coauthors, 2002: The CloudSat mission and the A-Train. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 83, 17711790, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-83-12-1771.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • vanZanten, M. C., and Coauthors, 2011: Controls on precipitation and cloudiness in simulations of trade-wind cumulus as observed during RICO. J. Adv. Model. Earth Syst., 3, M06001, https://doi.org/10.1029/2011MS000056.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Wang, J. J., and Coauthors, 2015: A long-term, high-quality, high-vertical-resolution GPS dropsonde dataset for hurricane and other studies. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 96, 961973, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-13-00203.1.

    • Crossref
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    • Export Citation
  • Wendisch, M., D. Müller, D. Schell, and J. Heintzenberg, 2001: An airborne spectral albedometer with active horizontal stabilization. J. Atmos. Oceanic Technol., 18, 18561866, https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0426(2001)018<1856:AASAWA>2.0.CO;2.

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  • Wendisch, M., and Coauthors, 2016: ACRIDICON–CHUVA campaign: Studying tropical deep convective clouds and precipitation over Amazonia using the new German research aircraft HALO. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 97, 18851908, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00255.1.

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    • Export Citation
  • Wendisch, M., and Coauthors, 2017: Understanding causes and effects of rapid warming in the Arctic. Eos, Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union, 98, 2226, https://doi.org/10.1029/2017EO064803.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Werner, F., H. Siebert, P. Pilewskie, T. Schmeissner, R. A. Shaw, and M. Wendisch, 2013: New airborne retrieval approach for trade wind cumulus properties under overlying cirrus. J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 118, 36343649, https://doi.org/10.1002/jgrd.50334.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Wirth, M., A. Fix, P. Mahnke, H. Schwarzer, F. Schrandt, and G. Ehret, 2009: The airborne multi-wavelength water vapor differential absorption lidar WALES: System design and performance. Appl. Phys., 96B, 201213, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00340-009-3365-7.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Wofsy, S. C., and Coauthors, 2011: HIAPER Pole-to-Pole Observations (HIPPO): Fine-grained, global-scale measurements of climatically important atmospheric gases and aerosols. Philos. Trans. Roy. Soc., 369A, 20732086, https://doi.org/10.1098/rsta.2010.0313.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Wolf, K., A. Ehrlich, M. Jacob, S. Crewell, M. Wirth, and M. Wendisch, 2019: Improvement of airborne retrievals of cloud droplet number concentration of trade wind cumulus using a synergetic approach. Atmos. Meas. Tech., 12, 16351658, https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-12-1635-2019.

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    • Export Citation
  • Zängl, G., D. Reinert, P. Rípodas, and M. Baldauf, 2015: The ICON (Icosahedral Non-Hydrostatic) modelling framework of DWD and MPI-M: Description of the non-hydrostatic dynamical core. Quart. J. Roy. Meteor. Soc., 141, 563579, https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.2378.

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1

NARVAL initially stood for North Atlantic Rainfall Validation. This name was motivated by HALO’s distinctive nose boom, which is reminiscent of the narwhal, a toothed whale that frequents waters over which the original mission intended to fly. Later NARVAL was redefined to stand for Next-Generation Advanced Remote Sensing for Validation studies. Today it stands as a metaphor for a yet broader concept.

2

MetOp is operated by the European Organisation for the Exploitation of Meteorological Satellites. AMSU-A,B fly on a variety of satellites. AMSR has flown on three satellites.

3

See Mech et al. (2014) for further technical details of the microwave suite of sensors—collectively referred to as the HALO Microwave Package (HAMP)—and Ewald et al. (2019) for the technical characterization and calibration of the radar based on flight tests. Mech et al. also include a photograph of the system as implemented on HALO.

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  • Stevens, B., and Coauthors, 2016: The Barbados Cloud Observatory: Anchoring investigations of clouds and circulation on the edge of the ITCZ. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 97, 787801, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00247.1.

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  • vanZanten, M. C., and Coauthors, 2011: Controls on precipitation and cloudiness in simulations of trade-wind cumulus as observed during RICO. J. Adv. Model. Earth Syst., 3, M06001, https://doi.org/10.1029/2011MS000056.

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  • Wang, J. J., and Coauthors, 2015: A long-term, high-quality, high-vertical-resolution GPS dropsonde dataset for hurricane and other studies. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 96, 961973, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-13-00203.1.

    • Crossref
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  • Wendisch, M., D. Müller, D. Schell, and J. Heintzenberg, 2001: An airborne spectral albedometer with active horizontal stabilization. J. Atmos. Oceanic Technol., 18, 18561866, https://doi.org/10.1175/1520-0426(2001)018<1856:AASAWA>2.0.CO;2.

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  • Wendisch, M., and Coauthors, 2016: ACRIDICON–CHUVA campaign: Studying tropical deep convective clouds and precipitation over Amazonia using the new German research aircraft HALO. Bull. Amer. Meteor. Soc., 97, 18851908, https://doi.org/10.1175/BAMS-D-14-00255.1.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Wendisch, M., and Coauthors, 2017: Understanding causes and effects of rapid warming in the Arctic. Eos, Trans. Amer. Geophys. Union, 98, 2226, https://doi.org/10.1029/2017EO064803.

    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Werner, F., H. Siebert, P. Pilewskie, T. Schmeissner, R. A. Shaw, and M. Wendisch, 2013: New airborne retrieval approach for trade wind cumulus properties under overlying cirrus. J. Geophys. Res. Atmos., 118, 36343649, https://doi.org/10.1002/jgrd.50334.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
    • Export Citation
  • Wirth, M., A. Fix, P. Mahnke, H. Schwarzer, F. Schrandt, and G. Ehret, 2009: The airborne multi-wavelength water vapor differential absorption lidar WALES: System design and performance. Appl. Phys., 96B, 201213, https://doi.org/10.1007/s00340-009-3365-7.

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  • Wolf, K., A. Ehrlich, M. Jacob, S. Crewell, M. Wirth, and M. Wendisch, 2019: Improvement of airborne retrievals of cloud droplet number concentration of trade wind cumulus using a synergetic approach. Atmos. Meas. Tech., 12, 16351658, https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-12-1635-2019.

    • Crossref
    • Search Google Scholar
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  • Zängl, G., D. Reinert, P. Rípodas, and M. Baldauf, 2015: The ICON (Icosahedral Non-Hydrostatic) modelling framework of DWD and MPI-M: Description of the non-hydrostatic dynamical core. Quart. J. Roy. Meteor. Soc., 141, 563579, https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.2378.

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  • Fig. 1.

    Cross section of HALO configured as a cloud observatory. Detail shows two positions with major instrumentation in the belly pod and in the tail section. SMART and specMACS are both passive instruments making measurements with high spectral resolution at visible and near-infrared wavelengths.

  • Fig. 2.

    Distribution of sonde launches for NARVAL1 (Dec 2013, Jan 2014) and NARVAL2 (Aug 2016) flights. Shaded is the position of the ITCZ and the storm-track region (blue) in Dec 2013 and the ITCZ (red) in Aug 2016. The ITCZ is defined to be regions with precipitation greater than 9 mm day–1, the storm tracks by the regions with precipitation greater than 6 mm day–1. The boundaries of these regions are smoothed before plotting.

  • Fig. 3.

    Exemplary LWP time series of about 10 min illustrating the intermittent nature of the typical liquid clouds encountered during NARVAL2, RF06. (a),(c) The flight track superimposed on the large-scale LWP field as derived from microwave measurements associated with satellite overpasses separated in time by about 4.5 h. (b),(d) The aircraft-derived LWP for the flight segments shown in (a) and (c), respectively. Two satellite products are shown for reference, one from the GMI, the other from the Multisensor Advanced Climatology of Liquid Water Path (MAC-LWP; Elsaesser et al. 2017). Cloud radar profiles shown classify the AMSR-E underflight in (b) as nonprecipitating while the GMI underflight in (d) includes several rain shafts. Note that due to the time difference to GMI the system is shifted in space. The time period between 1642 and 1645 UTC is highlighted in (b) as it is discussed in subsequent analysis.

  • Fig. SB1.

    Simulated retrieval for an idealized 1- and 4-km-diameter cylindrical cloud. Retrievals are presented for two sun incidence angles, on a scale normalized by the cloud diameter. For both clouds the depth is the same and cloud microphysical properties are idealized as following monodisperse droplet distribution with ql = 0.35 gm–3 and Nd = 84 cm–3. The idealizations help isolate the impact of cloud geometric effects on remotely sensed properties.

  • Fig. 5.

    Cloud scene from NARVAL2 RF06 flight segment outlined in Fig. 3a. (a) The backscatter ratio (WALES) at 532 nm, (b) the specMACS measurements at 1,597 nm with the field of view of other instruments (HAMP radiometer, SMART, and HAMP radar) outlined, and (c) cloud masks along the path for WALES, specMACS, SMART, and the radar with total cloud fraction along segment included on the right margin. No cloud mask is given for HAMP, but its field of view is shown in anticipation of subsequent analysis. For specMACS the fractional cloud cover across the swath from ±1° around nadir is shown. To simulate a sensor with lower resolution and higher sensitivity, specMACS 1/0 shows a binary version of that fraction, counting a time step as cloudy if just a single pixel (from ±1° around nadir) detected a cloud.

  • Fig. SB2.

    Collocated (a) backscatter ratio measured with the WALES lidar system and (b) radar reflectivity measured with the HAMP cloud radar between 2000 and 2100 UTC 16 Dec 2013 (RF06 of the NARVAL1 tropical flights), and (c) ice water content retrieved with the variational optimal estimation approach.

  • Fig. 4.

    (a) MODIS image at the time of the A-Train overpass during RF06. The MODIS overpass is indicated in red (for the time period between 1642 and 1645 UTC; Fig. 3b) and is bracketed by pairs of circular flight patterns designed to facilitate estimates of large-scale vertical motion from dropsonde wind measurements. (b),(c) Large-scale vertical velocity as derived from these sounding circles are illustrated, adapted from Bony and Stevens (2019).

  • Fig. 6.

    Time series of SMART radiances and synergistic retrievals for 3-min scene in Fig. 5. (a) Radiances at 860 and 1,600 nm, (b) retrieved optical depth at 860 nm, (c) retrieved effective radius near cloud top and associated (1σ) uncertainty, (d) LWP from SMART and HAMP retrievals with propagated uncertainty, and (e) estimation of droplet population density Nd using different combinations of sensors (methods A, B, and C) as explained in text and with propagated uncertainty (dashed).

  • Fig. 7.

    Rank histograms, in vigintiles, of cloud properties as defined by the HAMP cloud and precipitation radar. Cumulative distribution in rank order (lines; corresponding to left-axis scale) and precipitation probability p(P) (bars; measured on right). (a) Rank cloud depth, as measured by distance between lifting condensation level and echo top; (b) echo top; and (c) maximum object reflectivity. The cumulative distribution lines are colored according to whether the object is identified as raining or not. The precipitation probabilities thus show the fraction of blue (raining) vs total points in each vigintile.

  • Fig. 8.

    Nesting procedure to simulate area of flight operations during NARVAL. Starting from the interior 1.25-km nest of yet larger-scale simulations on a 2.5-km mesh, a three-step nesting procedure is applied to simulate the area of flight operations on a 150-m mesh. To enable spinup the simulations are initialized several hours before flight operations and integrated through the period of active measurements.