NASA Airborne Expedition Chases Climate, Ozone Questions

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June 27, 2007

Tabatha Thompson
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-3895 

RELEASE: 07-144

NASA AIRBORNE EXPEDITION CHASES CLIMATE, OZONE QUESTIONS

WASHINGTON -- NASA's Tropical Composition, Cloud and Climate Coupling 
(TC4) field campaign will begin this summer in San Jose, Costa Rica, 
with an investigation into how chemical compounds in the air are 
transported vertically into the stratosphere and how that transport 
affects cloud formation and climate.

The study will begin the week of July 16 with coordinated observations 
from satellites, high-flying NASA research aircraft, balloons and 
ground-based radar. The targets of these measurements are the gases, 
aerosols and ice crystals that flow from the top of the strong storm 
systems that form over the warm tropical ocean. These storm systems 
pump air more than 40,000 feet above Earth's surface, where it can 
influence the composition of the stratosphere, home of our planet's 
protective ozone layer.

The outflow of these storms also produces vast swaths of icy cirrus 
clouds that play an important role in how much infrared energy is 
trapped in Earth's atmosphere. Scientists want to document the full 
life cycle of these widespread clouds -- down to the size and shape 
of their tiny ice crystals -- to better understand how Earth will 
react to a warming climate.

"This campaign is an unprecedented opportunity to use NASA's complete 
suite of satellite and airborne Earth-observing capabilities to 
investigate a largely unexplored region of the atmosphere," said 
Michael J. Kurylo, a TC4 program scientist at NASA Headquarters, 
Washington. "This tropical transitional layer of the atmosphere 
between the troposphere and the stratosphere plays a key role in both 
climate change science and atmospheric ozone chemistry. The data will 
yield new insights into the composition of this layer and the impact 
of the deep clouds that penetrate the atmosphere up into this layer."

The effort runs through Aug. 8. It is NASA's largest Earth science 
field campaign of the year.

"A mission this complex, with three aircraft, deployment sites in 
Costa Rica and Panama, and more than 400 people involved, can be a 
real challenge," said Mission Project Manager Marilyn Vasques of NASA 
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif.

Soaring high above the cloud systems will be a NASA ER-2 aircraft, 
which can reach an altitude of 70,000 feet, or 3 miles into the 
stratosphere. A NASA WB-57 aircraft will fly into the cirrus clouds 
and sample the chemical make-up of the storm systems' outflow. NASA's 
DC-8 aircraft will probe the region between the troposphere and the 
stratosphere (known as the tropopause transitional layer) with 
remote-sensing instruments. It also will sample cloud particles and 
air chemistry at lower altitudes. A weather radar and meteorological 
balloons will be deployed in Panama to support the campaign. 
Additional balloons will be launched from Costa Rica and San 
Cristobal Island in the Galapagos Archipelago.

Observations from seven satellites will complement the aircraft 
measurements with large-scale views of many different features of the 
atmosphere. For example, the Aura spacecraft will focus on the 
chemical composition of the tropopause transitional layer and measure 
ozone, water vapor, carbon monoxide and particles. NASA's Aqua 
satellite will map thin cirrus clouds, some of which are so faint 
they are nearly invisible to the naked eye. Instruments on the 
CALIPSO and CloudSat satellites will pierce the atmosphere to provide 
vertical profiles of clouds and aerosol particles that can change how 
clouds form.

Along the coasts of Colombia and Panama south of Costa Rica, the warm 
summer waters of the Pacific Ocean are a fertile breeding ground for 
the type of heat-driven, or convective, storm systems the mission is 
targeting. Clouds produced by these maritime systems produce heavy 
rainfall and cloud tops that can reach into the transitional layer.

Mission scientists want to know what effect a warming climate with 
rising ocean temperatures will have on the intensity of these storm 
systems. Another unknown is how aerosol particles swept up in these 
systems change the clouds and are, in turn, affected by the clouds. 

These tropical convective systems also may play a role in the recovery 
of the ozone layer. Estimates of ozone destruction in the 
stratosphere typically minimize the impact of short-lived chemical 
compounds that presumably could not survive the long journey there. 
Mission scientists will investigate whether the rapid movement of air 
in these strong convective systems provides an express route for 
ozone-destroying compounds to reach the stratosphere.

The Earth Science Division at NASA Headquarters is sponsoring the $12 
million mission. Costa Rica's National Center for High Technology, 
San Jose, and the University of Panama, Las Tablas, are cooperating 
with NASA on the mission as are other U.S. agencies, such as the 
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the National 
Science Foundation.

For more information about NASA's TC4 mission, visit:

http://www.espo.nasa.gov/tc4

	
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