Abstract
Among seven airplanes involved in the Experience sur Site pour COntraindre les Modèles de Pollution atmosphérique et de Transport d'Emission (ESCOMPTE) experiment in 2001, four measured classical meteorological parameters, radiation fluxes, trace gases and turbulence (for three among four): the Dornier 128 from the Institut für Meteorologie und Klimaforschung, the Fokker 27 ARAT from the Institut National des Sciences de l'Univers, the Merlin 4 and Piper Aztec 23 from Météo France. This paper presents the results of intercomparison flights between three pairs of aircraft. The results are very similar for mean parameters except for the horizontal wind measurements provided by the Merlin that showed a problem that is probably linked to the measurement of the aircraft velocity. Further investigation is required to know whether corrections are possible or not for these wind measurements. Turbulence is studied along two legs over a flat and homogeneous area: in spite of the heterogeneity of the measured functions (one leg is close to the top of the boundary layer), the comparison is rather good. The relative accuracy of the data provided to the data base is given. It easily allows to use the huge amount of aircraft data collected during the experiment with very few restrictions. We underline some points where efforts should be borne for future experiments: wind coupling between Inertial Navigation System data and Global Positioning System (GPS) data, CO and NO x measurements.
Highlights
Experience sur Site pour COntraindre les Modeles de Pollution atmospherique et de Transport d’Emission (ESCOMPTE) is a program aimed to study atmospheric pollution
The Merlin and the ARAT are equipped with two radiation sensors able to measure JNO2, the photolysis dissociation coefficient of NO2 into NO
It will be necessary to contemplate the possibility of correcting the ARAT classical Rosemount by reducing it to get closer to the deiced sensor
Summary
Experience sur Site pour COntraindre les Modeles de Pollution atmospherique et de Transport d’Emission (ESCOMPTE) is a program aimed to study atmospheric pollution. One or two other airplanes described the 2D structure of the low troposphere by flying parallel legs at constant level, inside the atmospheric boundary-layer or/and just over. We have not been able to perform the intercomparison flights during the highly polluted situations and we will see it is a limitation for some chemical comparisons
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