4.7 Article

Meteorological and cloud conditions during the Arctic Ocean 2018 expedition

Journal

ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY AND PHYSICS
Volume 21, Issue 1, Pages 289-314

Publisher

COPERNICUS GESELLSCHAFT MBH
DOI: 10.5194/acp-21-289-2021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. UK Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) [NE/R009686/1]
  2. Knut and AliceWallenberg Foundation [2016-0024]
  3. NERC [NE/R009686/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The Arctic Ocean 2018 expedition provided important information on the coupling of the ocean, ice surface, and atmosphere, revealing new findings different from previous studies, which were related to the high frequency of cyclonic activity in the central Arctic in 2018.
The Arctic Ocean 2018 (AO2018) took place in the central Arctic Ocean in August and September 2018 on the Swedish icebreaker Oden. An extensive suite of instrumentation provided detailed measurements of surface water chemistry and biology, sea ice and ocean physical and biogeochemical properties, surface exchange processes, aerosols, clouds, and the state of the atmosphere. The measurements provide important information on the coupling of the ocean and ice surface to the atmosphere and in particular to clouds. This paper provides (i) an overview of the synoptic-scale atmospheric conditions and their climatological anomaly to help interpret the process studies and put the detailed observations from AO2018 into a larger context, both spatially and temporally; (ii) a statistical analysis of the thermodynamic and near-surface meteorological conditions, boundary layer, cloud, and fog characteristics; and (iii) a comparison of the results to observations from earlier Arctic Ocean expeditions - in particular AOE1996 (Arctic Ocean Expedition 1996), SHEBA (Surface Heat Budget of the Arctic Ocean), AOE2001 (Arctic Ocean Experiment 2001), ASCOS (Arctic Summer Cloud Ocean Study), ACSE (Arctic Clouds in Summer Experiment), and AO2016 (Arctic Ocean 2016) - to provide an assessment of the rep-resentativeness of the measurements. The results show that near-surface conditions were broadly comparable to earlier experiments; however the thermodynamic vertical structure was quite different. An unusually high frequency of well-mixed boundary layers up to about 1 km depth occurred, and only a few cases of the prototypical Arctic summer single-layer stratocumulus deck were observed. Instead, an unexpectedly high amount of multiple cloud layers and mid-level clouds were present throughout the campaign. These differences from previous studies are related to the high frequency of cyclonic activity in the central Arctic in 2018.

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