2013
DOI: 10.1175/bams-d-12-00005.1
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The Concordiasi Field Experiment over Antarctica: First Results from Innovative Atmospheric Measurements

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Cited by 24 publications
(26 citation statements)
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“…The driftsonde deployment supported AMMA's research focus on high-impact weather and was undertaken through a collaboration between AMMA and THORPEX. The program is summarized in Redelsperger et al (2006), with the driftsonde-observing strategy described in Rabier et al (2008). The AMMA measurement strategy included long-term observations from 2002 through 2010 to investigate the interannual variability of the West African monsoon.…”
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confidence: 99%
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“…The driftsonde deployment supported AMMA's research focus on high-impact weather and was undertaken through a collaboration between AMMA and THORPEX. The program is summarized in Redelsperger et al (2006), with the driftsonde-observing strategy described in Rabier et al (2008). The AMMA measurement strategy included long-term observations from 2002 through 2010 to investigate the interannual variability of the West African monsoon.…”
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confidence: 99%
“…The third major driftsonde deployment was in 2010 for the Concordiasi field experiment 4 (Rabier et al 2010(Rabier et al , 2013, a multidisciplinary effort jointly conducted by several groups in France and the United States to study the lower stratosphere and troposphere above Antarctica. Concordiasi was one of the cluster of THORPEX projects associated with the International Polar Year (e.g., Renfrew et al 2008;Hanesiak et al 2010;Kristjánsson et al 2011).…”
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“…For the first time, ozone loss has been observed in situ over long periods of time by specially designed ultraviolet photometers (Kalnajs and Avallone, 2010) flown on long-duration balloons launched as part of the Concordiasi campaign (Rabier et al, 2013) out of McMurdo Station, Antarctica, in austral spring of 2010. These super-pressure balloons travel on constant density (isopycnic) surfaces; the 2010 Concordiasi payloads were launched to a density ρ = 115 g m −3 which corresponds to approximately 65 hPa (17 km).…”
Section: Measurementsmentioning
confidence: 99%