The Harvard Water Vapor (HWV) instrument combines two independent measurement methods for the simultaneous in situ detection of ambient water vapor mixing ratios in a single duct. This dual axis instrument combines the heritage of the Harvard Lyman-α photo-fragment fluorescence instrument (LyA) with the newly designed tunable diode laser direct absorption instrument (HHH). The Lyman-α detection axis functions as a benchmark measurement, and provides a requisite link to the long measurement history of Harvard Lyman-α aboard NASA’s WB-57 and ER-2 aircraft [Weinstock et al., 1994; Hintsa et al., 1999; Weinstock et al., 2009]. The inclusion of HHH provides a second high precision measurement that is more robust than LyA to changes in its measurement sensitivity [Smith et al., in preparation]. The simultaneous utilization of radically different measurement techniques facilitates the identification, diagnosis, and constraint of systematic errors both in the laboratory and in flight. As such, it constitutes a significant step toward resolving the controversy surrounding water vapor measurements in the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere.
Harvard Lyman-α Photofragment Fluorescence Hygrometer
Instrument Type
Measurements
Aircraft
Recent Missions
Point(s) of Contact
Range of Measurement
In situ
Measurement Sampling Rate
1.00 Hz
Weight
63.50 kg
Power:
1000.00 W
Location
The instrument package is designed to mount in a spearpod forebody for use with NASA’s ER-2 or WB-57 aircraft.
Mission-Specific Writeups
Document
Publications
Weinstock, E., et al. (2009), Validation of the Harvard Lyman-a in situ water vapor instrument: Implications for the mechanisms that control stratospheric water vapor, J. Geophys. Res., 114, D23301, doi:10.1029/2009JD012427.
Weinstock, E., et al. (1994), New fast response photofragment fluorescence hygrometer for use on the NASA ER-2 and the Perseus remotely piloted aircraft, Rev. Sci. Instrum., 65, 3544−54.
Hintsa, E.J., et al. (1999), On the accuracy of in situ water vapor measurements in the troposphere and lower stratosphere with the Harvard Lyman-α hygrometer, J. Geophys. Res., 104, 8183-8189.
Smith, J.B. (2012), The Sources and Significance of Stratospheric Water Vapor: Mechanistic Studies from Equator to Pole, PhD Dissertation, Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University.