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April 24, 2007
SATELLITES OFFER SUNNY OUTLOOK ON
UNDERSTANDING POLAR
CLIMATE, WITH HELP OF CLOUDY SKIES
Far
beyond signaling the day’s
weather, clouds play a key role in regulating and understanding
climate. A team
of researchers recently completed a project to confirm what NASA
satellites are
telling us about how changes in clouds can affect climate in the
coldest
regions on Earth.
Clouds
and their traits – their
temperature, depth, size and shape of their droplets – play a
significant role
in how much of the sun's radiation reaches Earth's surface and what
amount of
heat energy Earth reflects back into the atmosphere. In 2006, NASA
simultaneously launched a pair of satellites, CloudSat and the
Cloud-Aerosol
Lidar and Infrared Pathfinder Satellite Observation (CALIPSO), which
together
use state-of-the-art instruments as they orbit the globe to reveal
detailed
information about clouds and their effect on climate.
Scientists predict that certain changes in cloud properties can
accelerate
climate change. "The polar regions are very sensitive indicators of
climate change," said Deborah Vane, project manager and deputy
principal
investigator for the CloudSat mission at NASA's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory, Pasadena,
Calif.
"It's been well reported now that the polar ice caps are undergoing net
melting. There's a complicated interaction between clouds and climate
in polar
regions that can contribute to temperature changes, and, in turn, speed
the
rate at which ice melts."
As
part of a major experiment to
unlock some of the particular mysteries of cold-season clouds,
researchers from
NASA; the Meteorological Service of Canada in Toronto; Colorado State
University, Fort Collins; and the Desert Research Institute, Reno,
Nev., employed
ground-based sensors in remote areas of Canada and sensors aboard
aircraft that
flew over the region this winter to confirm information CloudSat and
CALIPSO
provided. The aircraft flew beneath CloudSat and CALIPSO 21 times
during the
experiment, which took place between Oct. 31, 2006, and March 1, 2007.
Researchers were surprised to find extremely high ice water content in
snowstorms generated by the open waters of the Great Lakes, much higher
than
expected as snowstorm cloud systems are typically very shallow without
ample
depth to contain much ice and water content. Also, embedded layers of
significant amounts of liquid water were frequently found in very cold
multi-layer cloud systems – systems that were known prior to
have temperatures
high enough to freeze cloud water, resulting mostly in clouds laced
with ice.
Researchers consistently found liquid water in these clouds, which
posed a new
challenge to their assumptions and to models of these types of clouds.
"This campaign gives us a snapshot in time that, when combined with
additional satellite information in the future, should give us more
confidence
in what the satellites are telling us about cloud properties," said
Vane.
"Are the properties of the clouds changing over time? Just how much are
they changing, and what is the effect on the ground below? This
research will
ultimately help us understand what's happening with climate in the
polar
regions, a part of the world where accurate data measurements can be
difficult
to gather without satellites."
CloudSat
peers into clouds from
hundreds of miles above to allow researchers a sneak peek into just how
cloud
droplets change to become rain or snow. CALIPSO uses laser technology
called
lidar to gather data globally that researchers will use to analyze how
clouds
and aerosols affect the atmosphere.
"What's unique about this field experiment is that we're the only
research
group doing winter cloud validation," said David Hudak, a research
scientist at the Meteorological Service of Canada, and the principal
investigator of the field experiment. "Others have focused solely on
confirming satellite data from warm-season clouds. Cold-season clouds
have
completely different traits, and it's those specific properties that
contribute
to some of the changes we see in climate in the Arctic
and Antarctic."
Results from the Canadian field campaign will also help researchers
confirm
statistics in advance of a major satellite mission – NASA's
Global
Precipitation Measurement (GPM) satellite, set to launch in 2013
– that will
measure liquid rain and seeks to detect and estimate falling snow.
"Data from this experiment will help GPM observe snow as it is falling,
which is very difficult to do because snow crystals are so complex. We
really
want to delve into the nuances of their shape, how fast they fall, the
depth of
the snowfall clouds, and changes in cloud location," said physical
scientist Gail Skofronick Jackson, deputy project scientist for the
Global
Precipitation Measurement mission at NASA's Goddard Space Flight
Center,
Greenbelt, Md. "This field campaign is exciting because it can help us
get
a better fix on how to do this as we gear up for launching GPM."
During the experiment, a turboprop aircraft carrying lidar and radar
nearly
identical to instruments aboard the satellites flew through snow
clouds. Probes
on the aircraft's wings sampled cloud and aerosol properties, including
the
size and shape of snowflakes and total amount of snowflakes suspended
in the
clouds. On the ground, the research team used dual precipitation radar,
two
microwave radiometers, and a host of ground sensors. Ground sensors
that
sampled the falling precipitation and estimated its rate and type were
housed
at a rural post in southern Ontario
north of Toronto.
"Experiments
like this boost
our ability to rely on the accuracy of these satellite observations,"
said
Jackson.
"At a time when nations around the globe are devoting tremendous
resources
to studying the polar regions
as part of the
International Polar Year, this experiment really gets us on the right
path to
learning more about the ins and outs of climate in this critical part
of the
world."
For
more information and images, visit:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2007/polar_climate.html
Canadian
CloudSat/CALIPSO Field
Experiment:
http://c3vp.org/
CloudSat:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/cloudsat/main/index.html
CALIPSO:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/calipso/main/index.html
Global
Precipitation
Measurement Mission:
http://gpm.gsfc.nasa.gov/
NASA
and the International
Polar Year:
http://www.nasa.gov/mission_pages/IPY/main/index.html
Writer: Gretchen
Cook-Anderson,
NASA
Goddard Space Flight Center
##
Contact:
Lynn Chandler
NASA Goddard
Space Flight Center
301-286-2806
This text is
derived from:
http://www.nasa.gov/centers/goddard/news/topstory/2007/polar_climate.html
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