Abstract

The HAMSTRAD (H2O Antarctica Microwave Stratospheric and Tropospheric Radiometers) microwave radiometer operating at 60 GHz (oxygen line, thus temperature) and 183 GHz (water vapour line) has been permanently deployed at the Dome C station, Concordia, Antarctica [75°06′S, 123°21′E, 3,233 m above mean sea level] in January 2010 to study long-term trends in tropospheric absolute humidity and temperature. The great sensitivity of the instrument in the lowermost troposphere helped to characterize the diurnal cycle of temperature and H2O from the austral summer (January 2010) to the winter (June 2010) seasons from heights of 10 to 200 m in the planetary boundary layer (PBL). The study has characterized the vertical resolution of the HAMSTRAD measurements: 10–20 m for temperature and 25–50 m for H2O. A strong diurnal cycle in temperature and H2O (although noisier) has been measured in summertime at 10 m, decreasing in amplitude with height, and phase-shifted by about 4 h above 50 m with a strong H2O–temperature correlation (>0.8) throughout the entire PBL. In autumn, whilst the diurnal cycle in temperature and H2O is less intense, a 12-h phase shift is observed above 30 m. In wintertime, a weak diurnal signal measured between 10 to 200 m is attributed to the methodology employed, which consists of monthly averaged data, and that combines air masses from different origins (sampling effect) and not to the imprint of the null solar irradiation. In situ sensors scanning the entire 24-h period, radiosondes launched at 2000 local solar time (LST) and European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) analyses at 0200, 0800, 1400 and 2000 LST agree very well with the HAMSTRAD diurnal cycles for temperature and relatively well for absolute humidity. For temperature, HAMSTRAD tends to be consistent with all the other datasets but shows a smoother vertical profile from 10 to 100 m compared to radiosondes and in-situ data, with ECMWF profiles even smoother than HAMSTRAD profiles, and particularly obvious when moving from summer to winter. For H2O, HAMSTRAD measures a much moister atmosphere compared to all the other datasets with a much weaker diurnal cycle at 10 m. Our study has helped characterize the time variation of the PBL at Dome C with a top around 200 m in summertime decreasing to 30 m in wintertime. In summer, from 2000 to 0600 LST a stable layer is observed, followed by a well-mixed layer the remaining time, while only a nocturnal stable layer remains in winter. In autumn, a daytime convective layer shallower than the nocturnal stable layer develops.

Highlights

  • The Antarctic plateau is one of the coldest and driest places on Earth

  • HAMSTRAD tends to be consistent with all the other datasets but shows a smoother vertical profile from 10 to 100 m compared to radiosondes and in-situ data, with European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) profiles even smoother than HAMSTRAD profiles, and obvious when moving from summer to winter

  • Since the measurement sensitivity is very high in the lowermost troposphere, we have concentrated our analysis on the diurnal variabilities of the monthly-averaged absolute humidity and temperature as observed by HAMSTRAD in the planetary boundary layer from summer (January 2010) to winter (June 2010)

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Summary

Introduction

The Antarctic plateau (average altitude 2,500 m) is one of the coldest and driest places on Earth. The aims of the paper are, (1) to present the diurnal variations of temperature and absolute humidity from summer to winter as observed by the HAMSTRAD microwave radiometer in the Antarctic PBL (from 10 to 200 m above the altitude of the site) at the Dome C station; (2) to assess their quality by comparing them with radiosonde data at only one fixed time period (namely, 2000 LST), in situ sensors scanning the 24-h local times from heights of 4 to 45 m, and the analyses of the European Centre for Medium-Range Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) at four fixed local times (namely, 0200, 0800, 1400, 2000 LST); and (3) to highlight the processes producing these diurnal variations regarding the considered seasons.

HAMSTRAD
ECMWF Analyses
Radiosondes
Tower-Based Sensors
Temperature
Water Vapour
Vertical Profiles
Diurnal Variations at Fixed Heights
Discussions
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
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