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Dive into the research topics where Nadège Montoux is active.

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Featured researches published by Nadège Montoux.


Sensors | 2015

LIDAR Developments at Clermont-Ferrand—France for Atmospheric Observation

Patrick Fréville; Nadège Montoux; Jean-Luc Baray; Aurélien Chauvigné; F. Réveret; M. Hervo; Davide Dionisi; Guillaume Payen; K. Sellegri

We present a Rayleigh-Mie-Raman LIDAR system in operation at Clermont-Ferrand (France) since 2008. The system provides continuous vertical tropospheric profiles of aerosols, cirrus optical properties and water vapour mixing ratio. Located in proximity to the high altitude Puy de Dôme station, labelled as the GAW global station PUY since August 2014, it is a useful tool to describe the boundary layer dynamics and hence interpret in situ measurements. This LIDAR has been upgraded with specific hardware/software developments and laboratory calibrations in order to improve the quality of the profiles, calibrate the depolarization ratio, and increase the automation of operation. As a result, we provide a climatological water vapour profile analysis for the 2009–2013 period, showing an annual cycle with a winter minimum and a summer maximum, consistent with in-situ observations at the PUY station. An overview of a preliminary climatology of cirrus clouds frequency shows that in 2014, more than 30% of days present cirrus events. Finally, the backscatter coefficient profile observed on 27 September 2014 shows the capacity of the system to detect cirrus clouds at 13 km altitude, in presence of aerosols below the 5 km altitude.


Journal of Applied Remote Sensing | 2013

Subgrid-scale cirrus observed by lidar at mid-latitude: variability effects of the cloud optical depth

Philippe Keckhut; Jean-Marie Perrin; Gérard Thuillier; Christophe Hoareau; Jacques Porteneuve; Nadège Montoux

Abstract The temporal variability of the 532-nm optical depth of cirrus clouds observed with a lidar at Observatory of Haute-Provence (43.9°N, 5.7°E, and 683-m altitude), has been analyzed. While advection dominates at the first order, variability of the optical depth on timescales of minutes can be related to spatial fluctuations of cloud properties on typical scales of a few kilometers. Log-normal distributions of the optical depth have been used to model the variability of the cirrus optical depth as observed by lidars. These investigations have been performed for three independent classes of cirrus. The log-normal distribution of the optical depth is applicable to the classes of thin clouds; however, for thick clouds, likely due to successive freezing/defreezing effects, the distribution is rather bimodal. This work compares the effects of visible solar light scattered by inhomogeneous cirrus to effects generated by homogeneous clouds having a constant geometrical thickness using the short-scale lidar observations of optical depth distribution and an analytical approach. In the case of thin cirrus, the scattering of solar light reaching the ground is stronger for inhomogeneous than homogeneous cirrus. In case of thick cirrus, multiple-scattering processes need to be considered. The conclusion is that log-normal distribution of the cirrus optical depth should be considered in any radiative calculation in case of model grids larger than a few kilometers whatever the cirrus type is.


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

Evaluation of balloon and satellite water vapour measurements in the Southern tropical UTLS during the HIBISCUS campaign

Nadège Montoux; Alain Hauchecorne; Jean-Pierre Pommereau; Georges Durry; Béatrice Morel; Roger Jones; Franck Lefèvre; Hassan Bencherif

Balloon water vapour in situ and remote measurements in the tropical upper troposphere and lower stratosphere (UTLS) obtained during the HIBISCUS campaign around 20 S in Brazil in February–March 2004 using a tunable diode laser ( μSDLA), a surface acoustic wave (SAW) and a Vis-NIR solar occultation spectrometer (SAOZ) on a long duration balloon, have been used for evaluating the performances of satellite borne remote water vapour instruments available at the same latitude and measurement period. In the stratosphere, HALOE displays the best precision (2.5%), followed by SAGE II (7%), MIPAS (10%), SAOZ (20–25%) and SCIAMACHY (35%), all of which show approximately constant H2O mixing ratios between 20–25 km. Compared to HALOE of ±10% accuracy between 0.1–100 hPa, SAGE II and SAOZ show insignificant biases, MIPAS is wetter by 10% and SCIAMACHY dryer by 20%. The currently available GOMOS profiles of 25% precision show a positive vertical gradient in error for identified reasons. Compared to these, the water vapour of the Reprobus Chemistry Transport Model, forced at pressures higher than 95 hPa by the ECMWF analyses, is dryer by about 1 ppmv (20%). In the lower stratosphere between 16–20 km, most notable features are the steep degradation of MIPAS precision below 18 km, and the appearance of biases between instruments far larger than their quoted total uncertainty. HALOE and Correspondence to: N. Montoux ([email protected]) SAGE II (after spectral adjustment for reducing the bias with HALOE at northern mid-latitudes) both show decreases of water vapour with a minimum at the tropopause not seen by other instruments or the model, possibly attributable to an increasing error in the HALOE altitude registration. Between 16–18 km where the water vapour concentration shows little horizontal variability, and where the μSDLA balloon meaurements are not perturbed by outgassing, the average mixing ratios reported by the remote sensing instruments are substantially lower than the 4–5 ppmv observed by the μSDLA. Differences between μSDLA and HALOE and SAGE II (of the order of−2 ppmv), SCIAMACHY, MIPAS and GOMOS (−1 ppmv) and SAOZ ( −0.5 ppmv), exceed the 10% uncertainty of μSDLA, implying larger systematic errors than estimated for the various instruments. In the upper troposphere, where the water vapour concentration is highly variable, AIRS v5 appears to be the most consistent within its 25% uncertainty with balloon in-situ measurements as well as ECMWF. Most of the remote measurements show less reliability in the upper troposphere, losing sensitivity possibly because of absorption line saturation in their spectral ranges (HALOE, SAGE II and SCIAMACHY), instrument noise exceeding 100% (MIPAS) or imperfect refraction correction (GOMOS). An exception is the SAOZ-balloon, employing smaller H 2O absorption bands in the troposphere. Published by Copernicus Publications on behalf of the European Geosciences Union. 5300 N. Montoux et al.: Balloon and satellite H2O measurements in the tropical UTLS


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2007

An overview of the HIBISCUS campaign

Jean-Pierre Pommereau; Anne Garnier; Gerhard Held; A. M. Gomes; Florence Goutail; Georges Durry; F. Borchi; Alain Hauchecorne; Nadège Montoux; P. Cocquerez; Gerard Letrenne; Francois Vial; A. Hertzog; B. Legras; I. Pisso; J. A. Pyle; N. R. P. Harris; Roger Jones; A. D. Robinson; Graeme M. Hansford; L. Eden; T. Gardiner; N. R. W. Swann; B. M. Knudsen; N. Larsen; J. K. Nielsen; T. Christensen; F. Cairo; Federico Fierli; Michel Pirre


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2014

Assimilation of lidar signals: application to aerosol forecasting in the western Mediterranean basin

Yilong Wang; Karine Sartelet; Marc Bocquet; Patrick Chazette; Michaël Sicard; Giuseppe D'Amico; J.-F. Leon; L. Alados-Arboledas; Aldo Amodeo; Patrick Augustin; Jordi Bach; Livio Belegante; Ioannis Binietoglou; X. Bush; Adolfo Comeron; H. Delbarre; David Garcia-Vizcaino; Juan Luis Guerrero-Rascado; M. Hervo; M. Iarlori; P. Kokkalis; Diego Lange; Francisco Molero; Nadège Montoux; A. Muñoz; Constantino Muñoz; Doina Nicolae; A. Papayannis; Gelsomina Pappalardo; J. Preissler


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2015

EARLINET: potential operationality of a research network

Michaël Sicard; Giuseppe D'Amico; Adolfo Comeron; Lucia Mona; L. Alados-Arboledas; Aldo Amodeo; Holger Baars; J. M. Baldasano; Livio Belegante; Ioannis Binietoglou; J. A. Bravo-Aranda; A.J. Fernández; P. Fréville; David Garcia-Vizcaino; Aldo Giunta; M. J. Granados-Muñoz; Juan Luis Guerrero-Rascado; Diofantos G. Hadjimitsis; Alexander Haefele; M. Hervo; M. Iarlori; P. Kokkalis; Diego Lange; Rodanthi-Elisavet Mamouri; I. Mattis; Francisco Molero; Nadège Montoux; Alvaro Muñoz; C. Muñoz Porcar; Francisco Navas-Guzmán


Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2009

Evaluation of balloon and satellite water vapour measurements in the Southern tropical and subtropical UTLS during the HIBISCUS campaign

Nadège Montoux; Alain Hauchecorne; Jean-Pierre Pommereau; Franck Lefèvre; Georges Durry; Roger Jones; A. Rozanov; S. Dhomse; J. P. Burrows; Béatrice Morel; Hassan Bencherif


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2010

Isentropic modeling of a cirrus cloud event observed in the midlatitude upper troposphere and lower stratosphere

Nadège Montoux; Philippe Keckhut; Alain Hauchecorne; Julien Jumelet; Hélène Brogniez; Christine David


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2016

Comparison of the aerosol optical properties and size distribution retrievedby sun photometer with in situ measurements at midlatitude

Aurélien Chauvigné; K. Sellegri; M. Hervo; Nadège Montoux; Patrick Fréville; Philippe Goloub


Atmospheric Measurement Techniques | 2013

Cirrus crystal fall velocity estimates using the Match method with ground-based lidars: first investigation through a case study

Davide Dionisi; Philippe Keckhut; Christophe Hoareau; Nadège Montoux; Fernando Congeduti

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Philippe Keckhut

Pierre-and-Marie-Curie University

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Jean-Pierre Pommereau

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Slimane Bekki

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Georges Durry

University of Reims Champagne-Ardenne

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Franck Lefèvre

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Julien Jumelet

Université Paris-Saclay

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