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Dive into the research topics where Keri Nicoll is active.

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Featured researches published by Keri Nicoll.


Environmental Research Letters | 2010

Self-charging of the Eyjafjallajökull volcanic ash plume

R. G. Harrison; Keri Nicoll; Zbigniew Ulanowski; Tamsin A. Mather

Volcanic plumes generate lightning from the electrification of plume particles. Volcanic plume charging at over 1200 km from its source was observed from in situ balloon sampling of the April 2010 Eyjafjallajokull plume over Scotland. Whilst upper and lower edge charging of a horizontal plume is expected from fair weather atmospheric electricity, the plume over Scotland showed sustained positive charge well beneath the upper plume edge. At these distances from the source, the charging cannot be a remnant of the eruption itself because of charge relaxation in the finite conductivity of atmospheric air.


Environmental Research Letters | 2011

Observations of Saharan dust layer electrification

Keri Nicoll; R. G. Harrison; Zbigniew Ulanowski

Original article can be found at : http://iopscience.iop.org/ Copyright IOP Publishing. Third parties have the same rights to reuse articles in Envionmental Research Letters as described in the Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-Share Alike 2.5 license. These open access rights allow third-party users to copy, distribute and display the published version of articles in Envionmental Research Letters, and create derivative works, subject to appropriate attribution and non-commercial exploitation.


Physical Review Letters | 2013

Triboelectric charging of volcanic ash from the 2011 Grímsvötn eruption.

Isobel M P Houghton; Karen L. Aplin; Keri Nicoll

The plume from the 2011 eruption of Grímsvötn was highly electrically charged, as shown by the considerable lightning activity measured by the United Kingdom Met Offices low-frequency lightning detection network. Previous measurements of volcanic plumes have shown that ash particles are electrically charged up to hundreds of kilometers away from the vent, which indicates that the ash continues to charge in the plume [R. G. Harrison, K. A. Nicoll, Z. Ulanowski, and T. A. Mather, Environ. Res. Lett. 5, 024004 (2010); H. Hatakeyama J. Meteorol. Soc. Jpn. 27, 372 (1949)]. In this Letter, we study triboelectric charging of different size fractions of a sample of volcanic ash experimentally. Consistently with previous work, we find that the particle size distribution is a determining factor in the charging. Specifically, our laboratory experiments demonstrate that the normalized span of the particle size distribution plays an important role in the magnitude of charging generated. The influence of the normalized span on plume charging suggests that all ash plumes are likely to be charged, with implications for remote sensing and plume lifetime through scavenging effects.


Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2016

BAECC: A Field Campaign to Elucidate the Impact of Biogenic Aerosols on Clouds and Climate

Tuukka Petäjä; Ewan J. O’Connor; Dmitri Moisseev; Victoria A. Sinclair; Antti Manninen; Riikka Väänänen; Annakaisa von Lerber; Joel A. Thornton; Keri Nicoll; Walt Petersen; V. Chandrasekar; James N. Smith; Paul M. Winkler; Olaf Krüger; Hannele Hakola; Hilkka Timonen; David Brus; Tuomas Laurila; Eija Asmi; Marja-Liisa Riekkola; Lucia Mona; Paola Massoli; Ronny Engelmann; M. Komppula; Jian Wang; Chongai Kuang; Jaana Bäck; Annele Virtanen; Janne Levula; Michael Ritsche

AbstractDuring Biogenic Aerosols—Effects on Clouds and Climate (BAECC), the U.S. Department of Energy’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement (ARM) Program deployed the Second ARM Mobile Facility (AMF2) to Hyytiala, Finland, for an 8-month intensive measurement campaign from February to September 2014. The primary research goal is to understand the role of biogenic aerosols in cloud formation. Hyytiala is host to the Station for Measuring Ecosystem–Atmosphere Relations II (SMEAR II), one of the world’s most comprehensive surface in situ observation sites in a boreal forest environment. The station has been measuring atmospheric aerosols, biogenic emissions, and an extensive suite of parameters relevant to atmosphere–biosphere interactions continuously since 1996. Combining vertical profiles from AMF2 with surface-based in situ SMEAR II observations allows the processes at the surface to be directly related to processes occurring throughout the entire tropospheric column. Together with the inclusion of extensi...


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Note: Programmable data acquisition system for research measurements from meteorological radiosondes

R. G. Harrison; Keri Nicoll; A. G. Lomas

A programmable data acquisition system to allow novel use of meteorological radiosondes for atmospheric science measurements is described. In its basic form it supports four analogue inputs at 16 bit resolution, and up to two further inputs at lower resolution, configurable instead for digital instruments. It also provides multiple instrument power supplies (+8 V, +16 V, +5 V, and -8 V) from the 9 V radiosonde battery. During a balloon flight encountering air temperatures from +17 °C to -66 °C, the worst case voltage drift in the 5 V unipolar digitisation circuitry was 20 mV. The system liberates a new range of low cost atmospheric research measurements, by utilising radiosondes routinely launched internationally for weather forecasting purposes. No additional receiving equipment is required. Comparisons between the specially instrumented and standard meteorological radiosondes show negligible effect of the additional instrumentation on the standard meteorological data.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2009

A lightweight balloon-carried cloud charge sensor

Keri Nicoll; R. G. Harrison

Despite the importance of microphysical cloud processes on the climate system, some topics are under-explored. For example, few measurements of droplet charges in nonthunderstorm clouds exist. Balloon carried charge sensors can be used to provide new measurements. A charge sensor is described for use with meteorological balloons, which has been tested over a range of atmospheric temperatures from -60 to 20 degrees C, in cloudy and clear air. The rapid time response of the sensor (to >10 V s(-1)) permits charge densities from 100 fC m(-3) to 1 nC m(-3) to be determined, which is sufficient for it to act as a cloud edge charge detector at weakly charged horizontal cloud boundaries.


Environmental Research Letters | 2014

Atmospheric electric field measurements in urban environment and the pollutant aerosol weekly dependence

Hugo Gonçalves Silva; Ricardo Conceição; Marta Melgão; Keri Nicoll; P B Mendes; Mouhaydine Tlemcani; António Heitor Reis; R. G. Harrison

The weekly dependence of pollutant aerosols in the urban environment of Lisbon (Portugal) is inferred from the records of atmospheric electric field at Portela meteorological station (38°47′N, 9°08′W). Measurements were made with a Bendorf electrograph. The data set exists from 1955 to 1990, but due to the contaminating effect of the radioactive fallout during 1960 and 1970s, only the period between 1980 and 1990 is considered here. Using a relative difference method a weekly dependence of the atmospheric electric field is found in these records, which shows an increasing trend between 1980 and 1990. This is consistent with a growth of population in the Lisbon metropolitan area and consequently urban activity, mainly traffic. Complementarily, using a Lomb–Scargle periodogram technique the presence of a daily and weekly cycle is also found. Moreover, to follow the evolution of theses cycles, in the period considered, a simple representation in a colour surface plot representation of the annual periodograms is presented. Further, a noise analysis of the periodograms is made, which validates the results found. Two datasets were considered: all days in the period, and fair-weather days only.


Environmental Research Letters | 2014

Modulation of UK lightning by heliospheric magnetic field polarity

M. J. Owens; Chris J. Scott; Mike Lockwood; L. Barnard; R. G. Harrison; Keri Nicoll; C. E. J. Watt; A. J. Bennett

Observational studies have reported solar magnetic modulation of terrestrial lightning on a range of time scales, from days to decades. The proposed mechanism is two-step: lightning rates vary with galactic cosmic ray (GCR) flux incident on Earth, either via changes in atmospheric conductivity and/or direct triggering of lightning. GCR flux is, in turn, primarily controlled by the heliospheric magnetic field (HMF) intensity. Consequently, global changes in lightning rates are expected. This study instead considers HMF polarity, which doesnʼt greatly affect total GCR flux. Opposing HMF polarities are, however, associated with a 40–60% difference in observed UK lightning and thunder rates. As HMF polarity skews the terrestrial magnetosphere from its nominal position, this perturbs local ionospheric potential at high latitudes and local exposure to energetic charged particles from the magnetosphere. We speculate as to the mechanism(s) by which this may, in turn, redistribute the global location and/or intensity of thunderstorm activity.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2015

Note: A balloon-borne accelerometer technique for measuring atmospheric turbulence

Graeme Marlton; R. Giles Harrison; Keri Nicoll; Paul Williams

A weather balloon and its suspended instrument package behave like a pendulum with a moving pivot. This dynamical system is exploited here for the detection of atmospheric turbulence. By adding an accelerometer to the instrument package, the size of the swings induced by atmospheric turbulence can be measured. In test flights, strong turbulence has induced accelerations greater than 5g, where g = 9.81 m s(-2). Calibration of the accelerometer data with a vertically orientated lidar has allowed eddy dissipation rate values of between 10(-3) and 10(-2) m(2) s(-3) to be derived from the accelerometer data. The novel use of a whole weather balloon and its adapted instrument package can be used as a new instrument to make standardized in situ measurements of turbulence.


Review of Scientific Instruments | 2012

Balloon-borne disposable radiometer for cloud detection

Keri Nicoll; R. G. Harrison

A low cost, disposable instrument for measuring solar radiation during meteorological balloon flights through cloud layers is described. Using a photodiode detector and low thermal drift signal conditioning circuitry, the device showed less than 1% drift for temperatures varied from +20 °C to -35 °C. The angular response to radiation, which declined less rapidly than the cosine of the angle between the incident radiation and normal incidence, is used for cloud detection exploiting the motion of the platform. Oriented upwards, the natural motion imposed by the balloon allows cloud and clear air to be distinguished by the absence of radiation variability within cloud, where the diffuse radiation present is isotropic. The optical method employed by the solar radiation instrument has also been demonstrated to provide higher resolution measurements of cloud boundaries than relative humidity measurements alone.

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