FIRE Level 2
Entry Title: First ISCCP Regional Experiment (FIRE) Atlantic Stratocumulus Transition Experiment (ASTEX) SOFIA Drifting Buoy Data

Entry ID: FIRE_AX_SOF_BUOY_DFT_1
Aerosols Clouds Radiation Budget Field Campaigns
Description

The First ISCCP Regional Experiments have been designed to improve data products and cloud/radiation parameterizations used in general circulation models (GCMs). Specifically, the goals of FIRE are (1) to improve the basic understanding of the interaction of physical processes in determining life cycles of cirrus and marine stratocumulus systems and the radiative properties of these clouds during their life cycles and (2) to investigate the interrelationships between the ISCCP data, GCM parameterizations, and higher space and time resolution cloud data. To-date, four intensive field-observation periods were planned and executed: a cirrus IFO (October 13 - November 2, 1986); a marine stratocumulus IFO off the southwestern coast of California (June 29 - July 20, 1987); a second cirrus IFO in southeastern Kansas (November 13 - December 7, 1991); and a second marine stratocumulus IFO in the eastern North Atlantic Ocean (June 1 - June 28, 1992). Each mission combined coordinated satellite, airborne, and surface observations with modeling studies to investigate the cloud properties and physical processes of the cloud systems.SOFIA (Surface of the Ocean, Fluxes and Interaction with the Atmosphere) is a research program carried out by French groups from the Centre de Recherches en Physique de l'Environnement (CRPE), Laboratoire l'Aerologie (LA)-Toulouse, Centre de Meteorologie Marine (CMM)-Brest, Institut Francais de Rechercher sur la Mer (IFREMER)-Brest, Service d'Aeronomie-Paris, and Laboratoire de Meteorologie Dynamique (LMD)-Palaiseau with cooperation from Centre National de Recherche Meteorologique (CNRM)-Toulouse.The scientific objective of SOFIA during ASTEX was the study of energy transfer (heat, humidity and momentum fluxes) between the sea surface and the atmospheric boundary layer at scales ranging from the local scale to the mesoscale (50 km). The general concept of the program was to develop a measurement strategy based on nested boxes in which instrumentation would be used to estimate and quantify fluxes. These instruments, from which flux estimates at different scales would be measured, were used in connection with satellite measurements to understand and, hence, to validate the satellite integration of fluxes, particularly in the presence of mesoscale oceanic andatmospheric structures responsible for spatial inhomogeneity of fluxes.Five drifting buoys (CMM) with bathymetric chains (100 m) provided surface measurements of sea surface temperature, pressure and wind.

DOI

10.5067/ASDC_DAAC/FIRE/0056

Citation Styles for this Dataset
Keywords

From GCMD Science Keywords:
  • UPPER LEVEL WINDS
  • SEA SURFACE TEMPERATURE
  • AIR TEMPERATURE > SURFACE TEMPERATURE
  • HYDROSTATIC PRESSURE
  • ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE MEASUREMENTS
  • SURFACE WINDS
  • WATER PRESSURE
  • Bathymetric Chain
  • Hydrostatic Pressure
  • Sea Surface Temperature
  • Sofia
  • Variable Capacitance
  • Wind Direction
  • Wind Speed
Data Distribution

File Format(s):

Native

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Spatial Information

spatial-coverage-map
Spatial Coverage: (S: 32.66, N: 35.98), (W: -24.12, E: -19.45)
Spatial Coverage Type: Horizontal
Coordinate System: Geodetic
Granule Spatial Representation: Geodetic
Locations

MID-LATITUDE ATLANTIC OCEAN NORTH ATLANTIC OCEAN BOUNDARY LAYER SEA SURFACE TROPOSPHERE AZORES
Temporal Information

Temporal Coverage: 1992-05-30 - 1992-06-30
Platforms

Buoys
BUOYS
RADIOMETERS
RADIOMETERS
ANEMOMETERS
ANEMOMETERS
ANEMOMETERS
BATHYTHERMOGRAPHS
BATHYTHERMOGRAPHS
HUMIDITY SENSORS
HUMIDITY SENSORS
HUMIDITY SENSORS
Metadata Dates

Created on 1999-11-03
Last updated on 2024-03-25