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RESEARCH
Science
Atmospheric
Sciences
GLOBAL
WARMING
Temperature in upper atmosphere
measured at North and South poles
James E.
Kloeppel, Physical Sciences Editor
(217) 244-1073; kloeppel@uiuc.edu
Harvey Leifert, American Geophysical Union
(202) 777-7507; hleifert@agu.org
3/19/2001
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| UI
researcher Dr. Xinzhao Chu adjusts one of the solid state
lasers comprising the Fe Bolzmann temperature lidar in flight
aboard the NSF/NCAR Electra aircraft. This aircraft is owned
by the National Science Foundation and is operated by the
National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill. --
A sensitive laser radar (lidar) system, first deployed over Okinawa,
Japan, to observe meteor trails during the 1998 Leonid meteor shower,
has now been used to probe temperatures in the upper atmosphere over
both geographic poles.
As reported in the April 1 issue of Geophysical Research Letters, scientists
at the University of Illinois used a specially designed lidar system
to obtain the first measurements of upper atmosphere temperatures, iron
densities and polar mesospheric clouds over the North and South poles.
"Measuring temperature
profiles over the poles is essential for validating global circulation
models and for providing a baseline for assessing the impact of global
warming over the coming decades," said team leader Chester Gardner,
a UI professor of electrical and computer engineering. "Until now,
we were limited to measurements taken with balloon-borne sensors to
altitudes of less than 20 miles."
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| Photograph
of the sea ice at the North Pole on June 21, 1999. The UI
Fe Boltzmann temperature lidar made the first measurements
of upper atmosphere temperatures, Fe densities, and polar
mesospheric clouds over the North Pole on this flight.Ê |
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In collaboration with scientists at The Aerospace Corp. and the National
Center for Atmospheric Research, Gardner and his UI colleagues
professor George Papen, research scientist Xinzhao Chu and graduate
student Weilin Pan developed a more robust lidar system for measuring
temperature profiles from the middle of the stratosphere (about 20 miles
up) to the lower thermosphere at the edge of space (about 70 miles above
Earth). The system uses two powerful lasers operating in the near ultraviolet
region of the spectrum and two telescopes to detect the laser pulses
reflected from the atmosphere.
The researchers use two techniques for determining temperature. For
altitudes up to 50 miles, the amount of laser light reflected from air
molecules is measured and used to derive the temperature profile. For
higher altitudes, scattering of the laser beams from iron atoms
deposited in the upper atmosphere by meteoric ablation is measured.
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| The
UI Fe Boltzmann temperature lidar is currently installed in
the Atmospheric Research Observatory at the Amundsen-Scott
South Pole Station, where it is being used to characterize
the upper atmosphere temperature structure throughout the
year for the first time. |
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In June 1999, the lidar system
was flown over the North Pole to obtain temperature and iron density
measurements during the Arctic Mesopause Temperature Study. Six months
later, the instrument was taken to the Amundsen-Scott South Pole Station
where it is now being used to measure the atmosphere temperature structure
throughout the year. The National Science Foundation provided funding
for the two measurement campaigns.
"Temperature profiles obtained in the thermosphere over the North
Pole on
June 21, 1999, and in the mesopause region over the South Pole on Jan.
27, 2000, agreed closely with model predictions," Gardner said.
"Significant departures from the model were observed during the
austral fall, however. On May 8, 2000, for example, the lower mesosphere
was about 20 degrees [Celsius] warmer and the upper mesosphere was about
20 degrees [Celsius] cooler than predicted."
Gardner and his colleagues also measured the heights of polar mesospheric
clouds that formed over each of the poles during mid-summer. Unlike
the lower atmosphere, the upper atmosphere is colder during summer than
in winter. Polar mesospheric clouds form over the summertime polar caps
when temperatures fall below minus 125 degrees Celsius.
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| Sunlight
glistens off the Beardmore Glacier in this photograph taken
in January 2000 on the flight from McMurdo to South Pole.
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These clouds are the highest
on Earth, forming at an altitude of about 52 miles. Their brightness
and geographic extent have been increasing during the past four decades.
It is thought that these changes may be related to increasing levels
of atmospheric carbon dioxide and methane, which in the upper atmosphere
lead to cooler temperatures and increasing levels of water vapor. Surprisingly,
the altitudes of the polar mesospheric clouds over the South Pole were
consistently one to two miles higher than those over the North Pole.
"Higher polar mesospheric clouds may be an indication of stronger
upwelling in the summer mesosphere over Antarctica compared with the
North polar cap," Gardner said. "Stronger upwelling would
result in a cooler mesopause region."
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