Stuart Beaton
National Center for Atmospheric Research
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Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2017
Laura L. Pan; E. Atlas; R. J. Salawitch; Shawn B. Honomichl; James F. Bresch; William J. Randel; Eric C. Apel; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Andrew J. Weinheimer; Daniel C. Anderson; Stephen J. Andrews; Sunil Baidar; Stuart Beaton; Teresa L. Campos; Lucy J. Carpenter; Dexian Chen; B. Dix; Valeria Donets; Samuel R. Hall; T. F. Hanisco; Cameron R. Homeyer; L. G. Huey; Jorgen B. Jensen; Lisa Kaser; Douglas E. Kinnison; Theodore K. Koenig; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Chuntao Liu; Jiali Luo; Zhengzhao Johnny Luo
The Convective Transport of Active Species in the Tropics (CONTRAST) experiment was conducted from Guam (13.5° N, 144.8° E) during January-February 2014. Using the NSF/NCAR Gulfstream V research aircraft, the experiment investigated the photochemical environment over the tropical western Pacific (TWP) warm pool, a region of massive deep convection and the major pathway for air to enter the stratosphere during Northern Hemisphere (NH) winter. The new observations provide a wealth of information for quantifying the influence of convection on the vertical distributions of active species. The airborne in situ measurements up to 15 km altitude fill a significant gap by characterizing the abundance and altitude variation of a wide suite of trace gases. These measurements, together with observations of dynamical and microphysical parameters, provide significant new data for constraining and evaluating global chemistry climate models. Measurements include precursor and product gas species of reactive halogen compounds that impact ozone in the upper troposphere/lower stratosphere. High accuracy, in-situ measurements of ozone obtained during CONTRAST quantify ozone concentration profiles in the UT, where previous observations from balloon-borne ozonesondes were often near or below the limit of detection. CONTRAST was one of the three coordinated experiments to observe the TWP during January-February 2014. Together, CONTRAST, ATTREX and CAST, using complementary capabilities of the three aircraft platforms as well as ground-based instrumentation, provide a comprehensive quantification of the regional distribution and vertical structure of natural and pollutant trace gases in the TWP during NH winter, from the oceanic boundary to the lower stratosphere.
Journal of the Atmospheric Sciences | 2016
Ronald B. Smith; Alison D. Nugent; Christopher G. Kruse; David C. Fritts; James D. Doyle; Steven D. Eckermann; Michael J. Taylor; Andreas Dörnbrack; Michael Uddstrom; William A. Cooper; Pavel Romashkin; Jorgen B. Jensen; Stuart Beaton
AbstractDuring the Deep Propagating Gravity Wave Experiment (DEEPWAVE) project in June and July 2014, the Gulfstream V research aircraft flew 97 legs over the Southern Alps of New Zealand and 150 legs over the Tasman Sea and Southern Ocean, mostly in the low stratosphere at 12.1-km altitude. Improved instrument calibration, redundant sensors, longer flight legs, energy flux estimation, and scale analysis revealed several new gravity wave properties. Over the sea, flight-level wave fluxes mostly fell below the detection threshold. Over terrain, disturbances had characteristic mountain wave attributes of positive vertical energy flux (EFz), negative zonal momentum flux, and upwind horizontal energy flux. In some cases, the fluxes changed rapidly within an 8-h flight, even though environmental conditions were nearly unchanged. The largest observed zonal momentum and vertical energy fluxes were MFx = −550 mPa and EFz = 22 W m−2, respectively.A wide variety of disturbance scales were found at flight level over...
Geophysical Research Letters | 2015
Laura L. Pan; Shawn B. Honomichl; William J. Randel; Eric C. Apel; E. Atlas; Stuart Beaton; James F. Bresch; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Douglas E. Kinnison; Jean-Francois Lamarque; Alfonso Saiz-Lopez; R. J. Salawitch; Andrew J. Weinheimer
A recent airborne field campaign over the remote western Pacific obtained the first intensive in situ ozone sampling over the warm pool region from oceanic surface to 15 km altitude (near 360 K potential temperature level). The new data set quantifies ozone in the tropical tropopause layer under significant influence of convective outflow. The analysis further reveals a bimodal distribution of free tropospheric ozone mixing ratio. A primary mode, narrowly distributed around 20 ppbv, dominates the troposphere from the surface to 15 km. A secondary mode, broadly distributed with a 60 ppbv modal value, is prominent between 3 and 8 km (320 K to 340 K potential temperature levels). The latter mode occurs as persistent layers of ozone-rich drier air and is characterized by relative humidity under 45%. Possible controlling mechanisms are discussed. These findings provide new insight into the physical interpretation of the “S”-shaped mean ozone profiles in the tropics.
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2017
Britton B. Stephens; Matthew C. Long; Ralph F. Keeling; Eric A. Kort; Colm Sweeney; Eric C. Apel; Elliot Atlas; Stuart Beaton; Jonathan D. Bent; Nicola J. Blake; James F. Bresch; Joanna Gordon Casey; Bruce C. Daube; Minghui Diao; Ernesto Diaz; Heidi M. Dierssen; Valeria Donets; Bo Cai Gao; Michelle M. Gierach; Robert O. Green; Justin M. Haag; Matthew Hayman; Alan J. Hills; Martín S. Hoecker-Martínez; Shawn B. Honomichl; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Jorgen B. Jensen; Rong Rong Li; Ian McCubbin; Kathryn McKain
AbstractThe Southern Ocean plays a critical role in the global climate system by mediating atmosphere–ocean partitioning of heat and carbon dioxide. However, Earth system models are demonstrably deficient in the Southern Ocean, leading to large uncertainties in future air–sea CO2 flux projections under climate warming and incomplete interpretations of natural variability on interannual to geologic time scales. Here, we describe a recent aircraft observational campaign, the O2/N2 Ratio and CO2 Airborne Southern Ocean (ORCAS) study, which collected measurements over the Southern Ocean during January and February 2016. The primary research objective of the ORCAS campaign was to improve observational constraints on the seasonal exchange of atmospheric carbon dioxide and oxygen with the Southern Ocean. The campaign also included measurements of anthropogenic and marine biogenic reactive gases; high-resolution, hyperspectral ocean color imaging of the ocean surface; and microphysical data relevant for understan...
Geophysical Research Letters | 2013
Minghui Diao; Mark A. Zondlo; Andrew J. Heymsfield; Stuart Beaton; David C. Rogers
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2013
Minghui Diao; Mark A. Zondlo; Andrew J. Heymsfield; Linnea M. Avallone; Mark E. Paige; Stuart Beaton; Teresa L. Campos; D. C. Rogers
Geophysical Research Letters | 2014
Minghui Diao; Mark A. Zondlo; Andrew J. Heymsfield; Stuart Beaton
Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics | 2017
Romy Heller; Christiane Voigt; Stuart Beaton; Andreas Dörnbrack; Andreas Giez; Stefan Kaufmann; Christian Mallaun; Hans Schlager; Johannes Wagner; Kate Young; Markus Rapp
Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society | 2018
Bruce A. Albrecht; Virendra P. Ghate; Johannes Mohrmann; Robert J. K. Wood; Paquita Zuidema; Christopher S. Bretherton; Christian Schwartz; Edwin Eloranta; Susanne Glienke; Shaunna L. Donaher; Mampi Sarkar; Jeremy McGibbon; Alison D. Nugent; Raymond A. Shaw; Jacob P. Fugal; Patrick Minnis; Robindra Paliknoda; Louis Lussier; Jorgen B. Jensen; Jothiram Vivekanandan; Scott Ellis; Peisang Tsai; Robert A. Rilling; Julie Haggerty; Teresa L. Campos; Meghan Stell; Michael Reeves; Stuart Beaton; John J. Allison; Gregory Stossmeister
Geophysical Research Letters | 2015
Liwen Pan; Shawn B. Honomichl; William J. Randel; Eric C. Apel; E. Atlas; Stuart Beaton; James F. Bresch; Rebecca S. Hornbrook; Doug Kinnison; J.-F. Lamarque; Alfonso Saiz-Lopez; R. J. Salawitch; Andrew J. Weinheimer