Publication Date:
2006
abstract:
Space borne infrared limb emission measurements
by the Michelson Interferometer for Passive Atmospheric
Sounding (MIPAS) reveal the formation of a belt of polar
stratospheric clouds (PSCs) of nitric acid trihydrate (NAT)
particles over Antarctica in mid-June 2003. By mesoscale
microphysical simulations we show that this sudden onset of
NAT PSCs was caused by heterogeneous nucleation on ice in
the cooling phases of large-amplitude stratospheric mountain
waves over the Antarctic Peninsula and the Ellsworth Mountains.
MIPAS observations of PSCs before this event show no
indication for the presence of NAT clouds with volume densities
larger than about 0.3?m3/cm3 and radii smaller than
3?m, but are consistent with supercooled droplets of ternary
H2SO4/HNO3/H2O solution (STS). Simulations indicate that
homogeneous surface nucleation rates have to be reduced by
three orders of magnitude to comply with the observations.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Cairo, Francesco
Published in: