2021
DOI: 10.5194/amt-2020-515
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Drone Measurements of Surface-Based Winter Temperature Inversions in the High Arctic at Eureka

Abstract: Abstract. The absence of sunlight during the winter in the High Arctic results in a strong surface-based atmospheric temperature inversion especially during clear skies and light surface wind conditions. The inversion suppresses turbulent heat transfer between the ground and the boundary layer. As a result the difference between the surface air temperature, measured at a height of 2 m, and the ground skin temperature can exceed several degrees Celsius. Such inversions occur very frequently in polar regions and… Show more

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“…A full-scale study of the regularity of the distribution of temperature, relative humidity, and concentration of suspended particles over the polynya at low temperatures (from −20 to −40 ∘ C) has not yet been performed. The experience of using a drone at low temperatures comparable to those observed in Krasnoyarsk is described in a preprint of an article published in February 2021, prepared by a group of Canadian researchers [8]. This article describes in detail the successful operation of the Matrice 210 RTK drone in low Arctic temperatures.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A full-scale study of the regularity of the distribution of temperature, relative humidity, and concentration of suspended particles over the polynya at low temperatures (from −20 to −40 ∘ C) has not yet been performed. The experience of using a drone at low temperatures comparable to those observed in Krasnoyarsk is described in a preprint of an article published in February 2021, prepared by a group of Canadian researchers [8]. This article describes in detail the successful operation of the Matrice 210 RTK drone in low Arctic temperatures.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%