Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
9459857 | Atmospheric Research | 2005 | 31 Pages |
Abstract
Ground-based remote sensing systems have been used during the ESCOMPTE campaign, to continuously characterize the boundary-layer behaviour through many atmospheric parameters (wind, extinction and ozone concentration distribution, reflectivity, turbulence). This analysis is focused on the comparison of the atmospheric stratification retrieved from a UV angular ozone lidar, an Ultra High Frequency wind profiler and a sodar, above the area of Marseille, on June 26th 2001 (Intensive Observation Period 2b). The atmospheric stratification is shown to be very complex including two superimposed sea breezes, with an important contribution of advection. The temporal and spatial evolution of the stratification observed by the UV lidar and by the UHF radar are in good agreement although the origin of the echoes of these systems is quite different. The complexity of the dynamic situation has only partially been retrieved by a non-hydrostatic mesoscale model used with a 3 km resolution.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Atmospheric Science
Authors
H. Delbarre, P. Augustin, F. Saïd, B. Campistron, B. Bénech, F. Lohou, V. Puygrenier, C. Moppert, F. Cousin, P. Fréville, E. Fréjafon,