Airborne Tropical TRopopause EXperiment

Agency
NASA
Category
Earth Venture
Status
Funded
Location
Dryden, Guam, Australia
Date
-
-
-
Details

Despite its low concentration, stratospheric water vapor has large impacts on the earth’s energy budget and climate. Recent studies suggest that even small changes in stratospheric humidity may have climate impacts that are significant compared to those of decadal increases in greenhouse gases. Future changes in stratospheric humidity and ozone concentration in response to changing climate are significant climate feedbacks.

While the tropospheric water vapor climate feedback is well represented in global models, predictions of future changes in stratospheric humidity are highly uncertain because of gaps in our understanding of physical processes occurring in the Tropical Tropopause Layer (TTL, ~13-18 km), the region of the atmosphere that controls the composition of the stratosphere. Uncertainties in the TTL chemical composition also limit our ability to predict future changes in stratospheric ozone.

Airborne Tropical TRopopause EXperiment (ATTREX) will perform a series of measurement campaigns using the long-range NASA Global Hawk (GH) unmanned aircraft system (UAS) to directly address these problems.

Instruments PI Institution Zones
MMS Paul Bui NASA Ames 7
CPL Dr. Matthew McGill NASA GSFC 3 & 7
O3 Dr. Ru‐Shan Gao NOAA 12
ULH Dr. Robert Herman NASA JPL 13
UCATS Dr. James Elkins NOAA/ESRL 16
PCRS Dr. Steven Wofsy Harvard University 25
Mini‐DOAS Dr. Jochen Peter Stutz UCLA 25
DLH Dr. Glenn Diskin NASA LaRC 25
MTP Dr. M.J. Mahoney NASA JPL 25
FCDP (Hawkeye) Dr. Paul Lawson SPEC 25
SSFR Dr. Peter Pilewskie University of Colorado 46
AWAS Dr. Elliot Atlas University of Miami 61