In downloading this resource contents you are ethically bound to respect the terms of this license.
Please confirm that you accept the terms of this license below before you can do any downloads for this resource.
Resource License Agreement
This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY.
In downloading this resource contents you are ethically bound to respect the terms of this license.
Please confirm that you accept the terms of this license below before you can do any downloads for this resource.
Please wait for the process to complete.
Redirecting to the referenced web URL
The content you have requested to access is not stored in HydroShare, and we can’t guarantee its availability,
quality, security, or size. If the externally linked content is large, access may take time.
Get file URL
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Discoverable resource.
This resource has Private Link Sharing enabled.
This means that anyone with the link will be able to access the file,
but users without the link will not be permitted unless they have "view" permission on this resource.
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Discoverable resource.
Only you and other HydroShare users who have been granted at least "view" permission will be able to access this URL.
If you want this URL to be publicly available,
change the sharing status of your resource to "public" or enable Private Link Sharing.
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Private resource.
This resource has Private Link Sharing enabled.
This means that anyone with the link will be able to access the file,
but users without the link will not be permitted unless they have "view" permission on this resource.
You have requested the URL for a file that is within a Private resource.
Only you and other HydroShare users who have been granted at least "view" permission will be able to access this URL.
If you want this URL to be publicly available, change the sharing status of your resource to "public" or enable Private Link Sharing.
Choose coordinates
Checking for non-preferred file/folder path names (may take a long time depending on the number of files/folders) ...
The following files/folders contain non-preferred characters in their name.
This may result in problems and you are encouraged to change the name to follow the
HydroShare preferred character set.
The following files are out of sync with the metadata changes.
Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds
A tethered-balloon system (TBS) has been developed and is being operated by Sandia National Laboratories (SNL) on behalf of the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) User Facility in order to collect in situ atmospheric measurements within mixed-phase Arctic clouds. Periodic tethered-balloon flights have been conducted since 2015 within restricted airspace at ARM’s Advanced Mobile Facility 3 (AMF3) in Oliktok Point, Alaska, as part of the AALCO (Aerial Assessment of Liquid in Clouds at Oliktok), ERASMUS (Evaluation of Routine Atmospheric Sounding Measurements using Unmanned Systems), and POPEYE (Profiling at Oliktok Point to Enhance YOPP Experiments) field campaigns. The tethered-balloon system uses helium-filled 34 m3 helikites and 79 and 104 m3 aerostats to suspend instrumentation that is used to measure aerosol particle size distributions, temperature, horizontal wind, pressure, relative humidity, turbulence, and cloud particle properties and to calibrate ground-based remote sensing instruments. Supercooled liquid water content (SLWC) sondes using the vibrating-wire principle, developed by Anasphere Inc., were operated at Oliktok Point at multiple altitudes on the TBS within mixed-phase clouds for over 200 h. Sondecollected SLWC data were compared with liquid water content derived from a microwave radiometer, Ka-band ARM zenith radar, and ceilometer at the AMF3, as well as liquid water content derived from AMF3 radiosonde flights. The in situ data collected by the Anasphere sensors were also compared with data collected simultaneously by an alternative SLWC sensor developed at the University of Reading, UK; both vibrating-wire instruments were typically observed to shed their ice quickly upon exiting the cloud or reaching maximum ice loading. Temperature sensing measurements distributed with fiber optic tethered balloons were also compared with AMF3 radiosonde temperature measurements. Combined, the results indicate that TBSdistributed temperature sensing and supercooled liquid water measurements are in reasonably good agreement with remote sensing and radiosonde-based measurements of both properties. From these measurements and sensor evaluations, tethered-balloon flights are shown to offer an effective method of collecting data to inform and constrain numerical models, calibrate and validate remote sensing instruments, and characterize the flight environment of unmanned aircraft, circumventing the difficulties of in-cloud unmanned aircraft flights such as limited flight time and inflight icing.
Data collected with CTEMPs DTS available upon request from ctemps@unr.edu.
This resource contains links to external content. Linked content is
NOT stored in HydroShare, and we can't guarantee its availability, quality, or
security.
Confirm files deletion
This file will be permanently deleted. Consider saving a copy if it is
important to you. If this is the last file in the resource and it is public,
the sharing status will revert to private. If you are not the owner of
this resource, then an owner will need to reset this to public after a new
file has been added. If you want to replace this file, add the new file
first then delete the old one, so that sharing status does not change.
This resource was created using funding from the following sources:
Agency Name
Award Title
Award Number
National Science Foundation
1440506
Contributors
People or Organizations that contributed technically, materially, financially, or provided general support for the
creation of the resource's content but are not considered authors.
Dexheimer, D., M. Airey, E. Roesler, C. Longbottom, K. Nicoll, S. Kneifel, F. Mei, R. G. Harrison, G. Marlton, P. D. Williams (2022). Evaluation of ARM tethered-balloon system instrumentation for supercooled liquid water and distributed temperature sensing in mixed-phase Arctic clouds, HydroShare, https://doi.org/10.4211/hs.f78b3ee3d7954ebeb4578874100c5272
This resource is shared under the Creative Commons Attribution CC BY.
Comments
There are currently no comments
New Comment