An instrumented station for the survey of ozone and climate change in the southern tropics
Author(s) -
JeanLuc Baray,
J. Leveau,
S. Baldy,
J. Jouzel,
Philippe Keckhut,
G. Bergametti,
G. Ancellet,
Hassan Benchérif,
Bertrand Cadet,
M. Carleer,
C. David,
Martine De Mazière,
D. Faduilhe,
Sophie Godin Beekmann,
Philippe Goloub,
F. Goutail,
JeanMarc Metzger,
Béatrice Morel,
J. P. Pommereau,
Jacques Porteneuve,
Thierry Portafaix,
Françoise Posny,
Laurent Robert,
Michel Van Roozendaël
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
journal of environmental monitoring
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1464-0333
pISSN - 1464-0325
DOI - 10.1039/b607762e
Subject(s) - troposphere , stratosphere , tropopause , environmental science , atmospheric sciences , ozone layer , trace gas , climatology , tropics , tropospheric ozone , ozone , climate change , meteorology , geography , geology , oceanography , fishery , biology
The assessment of changes induced by human activities on Earth atmospheric composition and thus on global climate requires a long-term and regular survey of the stratospheric and tropospheric atmospheric layers. The objective of this paper is to describe the atmospheric observations performed continuously at Reunion Island (55.5 degrees east, 20.8 degrees south) for 15 years. The various instruments contributing to the systematic observations are described as well as the measured parameters, the accuracy and the database. The LiDAR systems give profiles of temperature, aerosols and ozone in the troposphere and stratosphere, probes give profiles of temperature, ozone and relative humidity, radiometers and spectrometers give stratospheric and tropospheric integrated columns of a variety of atmospheric trace gases. Data are included in international networks, and used for satellite validation. Moreover, some scientific activities for which this station offers exceptional opportunities are highlighted, especially air mass exchanges nearby dynamical barriers: (1) On the vertical scale through the tropical tropopause layer (stratosphere-troposphere exchange). (2) On the quasi-horizontal scale across the southern subtropical barrier separating the tropical stratospheric reservoir from mid- and high latitudes.
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