Mission
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To study the
massive plumes of dust and pollutants that are blown from Asia
to North America and how these plumes may affect
- the formation of clouds and the development of
precipitation
- the intensity of storms moving across the Pacific
- the amount of sunlight that reaches Earth
- the extent to
which greenhouse gases will warm the Pacific basin as well as
the entire globe in the next few decades
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When
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Starting soon after April 18 and lasting
six weeks, until early June.
- Two missions lasting about 10 days
each will be flown during the six-week project.
- The start date for each mission depends on weather conditions
in Asia and how the winds are affecting dust and pollutants there.
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Timing (Why Springtime?)
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Spring is
when prevailing winds blow the largest plumes of dust and pollutants
across the Pacific.
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Where
Related
visual:
Hypothetical flight map
|
The NSF/NCAR Gulfstream-V will fly out of
- Boulder, Colorado;
- Anchorage, Alaska; and
- Yokota Air Base, near
Akita, Japan.
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Who
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Two principal investigators
- Jeff Stith (NCAR)
- V. Ramanathan (Scripps Institution of Oceanography)
During each mission, one principal investigator will serve
as mission scientist on the aircraft while the other directs
a ground support team providing real-time information from
computer models and satellite data to the mission scientist.
Also aboard the Gulfstream-V
- NCAR pilot and co-pilot
- Scientists and technicians operating
research instruments and conducting measurements
On the ground
- Asian and North American scientists will use a suite of ground-based
instruments to measure the extent of the plumes as they leave Asia
and to study the plumes from below.
- The instruments will be based
at sites in China, South Korea, Japan, and Alaska.
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Participants and Costs
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Total cost of the PACDEX field campaign
is approximately $1 million. This does not include subsequent research
by other organizations that will use the data collected during
the campaign.
Dozens of scientists from North America and Asia will work on
the field project.
North America
In addition to NCAR and Scripps, the main North American organizations
are:
- NASA
- NOAA
- Arizona State
University
- Colorado State University
- National Autonomous University of Mexico
- Naval Research Laboratory
- Oregon State University
- University of Alaska
- University of
Colorado
- University of Iowa
Asia
- Japanese National Institute for Environmental Studies,
- Lanzhou
University, China
- Peking University, China
- Seoul National
University, Korea
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Aircraft
Related visuals:
Readying the G-V;
The NSF/NCAR Gulfstream-V |
The NSF/NCAR Gulfstream-V is the nation's
most advanced aircraft for environmental research. The G-V is owned
by the National Science Foundation and operated by the National
Center for Atmospheric Research.
Formerly known as the High-performance
Instrumented Airborne Platform for Environmental Research, the
G-V can fly nonstop as far as 6,000 miles, depending on its instrument
load, and can achieve a top altitude of about 51,000 feet.
The G-V's capabilities
will enable PACDEX researchers to trace plumes of dust and pollutants
from Asia to North America, sampling air from just a few hundred
feet above the Earth’s
surface to as high as the lower stratosphere. The G-V joined
the NCAR research aircraft fleet in March 2005; PACDEX is its first
international mission.
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Instruments on board
Related visual:
Readying the G-V
|
The NSF/NCAR Gulfstream-V will carry
a large number of specialized instruments, some newly developed
by NCAR or private companies. Some of the instruments will be mounted
in pods under the wings or on the mainframe of the aircraft. Others
will be inside the cabin. Examples include:
- A package of inlets to capture samples of air and transport
them inside the cabin
- Aerosol particle counters that calculate size and concentration
by measuring the light scattered by each
particle
- Chambers that replicate conditions found in clouds, which will
be used to determine the number of aerosol particles
that form water droplets and ice particles, as they would in
natural clouds
- Spectrometers that measure solar radiation at various wavelengths,
so that changes in sunlight in and around the plume can be documented.
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What will be measured
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Onboard measurements will include:
- The levels of certain
gases, such as carbon monoxide, that exist in very small amounts
(measured in parts per billion). These trace gases indicate the
presence of clean or polluted air.
- The size, concentration, and composition of water droplets
and ice particles detected in clouds within and outside
the plume.
- The size, concentration, and basic chemical composition of
airborne particles, including dust, black carbon, and sulfates.
- The number of airborne particles that are able to form cloud
droplets or ice crystals in clouds.
- The
levels of various wavelengths of solar radiation in the plumes.
On the ground:
- Scientists will use laboratory equipment to conduct
more sophisticated tests on the air samples collected by the
aircraft.
- Mission data on clouds and solar
radiation will be incorporated into computer models of the atmosphere
to better understand weather conditions and long-term changes
in climate.
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Results
|
Scientists may start seeing preliminary results
during the PACDEX field campaign.
In the months and years that follow, scientists around the world
will have access to all the data gathered during the field campaign,
which they can use to refine computer models and better understand
the impacts of the plumes on cloud formation, storm systems,
and global and regional climate. |
What's unique about PACDEX?
|
In contrast to prior experiments, during
PACDEX researchers will focus much of their efforts on understanding
the interactions of Asian dust and pollution plumes with clouds.
The research team will also try to follow a specific dust outbreak
in its journey across the entire Pacific. PACDEX also marks the
first international mission for the new NSF/NCAR Gulfstream-V
research aircraft.
Prior
studies have looked at other
aspects of Asian dust and pollution. For example, international
teams of researchers studied plumes over East Asia and nearby regions
of the Pacific in 2001 in projects called the Aerosol Characterization
Experiment–Asia (ACE-Asia)
and Transport and Chemical Evolution over the Pacific (TRACE-P).
More recently, in 2006, a
NASA-led campaign called the Intercontinental Chemical Transport
Experiment (INTEX-B)
included extensive chemical studies of Asian pollution plumes over
the mid- and eastern Pacific.
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| Other sources of dust and pollutants |
Understanding the downwind effects of dust and
pollutants from all regions is an important problem for atmospheric
scientists.
In 2004, for example, NCAR joined with other institutions in a
large field campaign examining the effects of gases and particles
lofted from North America across the Atlantic Ocean toward Europe.
The campaign brought together several experiments under the umbrella
of the International Consortium for Atmospheric Research on Transport
and Transformation (ICARTT),
including the Intercontinental Chemical Transport Experiment–North
America (INTEX-NA),
and the New England Air Quality Study (NEAQS). |