INPE Will Investig. Impact of Ocean Changes on Atmosphere
Hello
reader!
It
follows a note published on the day (10/09) in the website of the National
Institute for Space Research (INPE) informing that experiment
will investigate the impact of Ocean Changes on Atmosphere.
Duda
Falcão
Experiment Will Investigate the Impact
of Ocean Changes on Atmosphere
Tuesday, October 09, 2012
Aboard the
Polar ship Almirante Maximiano, staff of the National Institute for Space
Research (Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas Espaciais - INPE) will held in
October and November the INTERCONF experiment, aimed at assessing the impacts
of the surface temperature of the sea water changes in the atmosphere. The mission,
which extends from South America to Antarctica, will be important for studies
of the region called Brazil-Malvinas Confluence.
“In this
region the Brazil’s warm current meet the Malvinas’ cold current causing
atmospheric instabilities of synoptic characteristics and impacts in the
climatic balance of ocean-atmosphere system,” sayd Luciano Ponzi Pezzi, an
INPE’s researcher. “This variability may cause effects in spatial scales up to
500 Kilometers and in time scales up to three months (oceanic mesoscale).
The atmosphere
reacts differently above warm or cold water. This temperature variation causes
impacts on the flows of heat, momentum and gases, especially CO2, between
atmosphere and ocean, determining the stability at lower levels of the
atmosphere above sea level (atmospheric boundary layer).
“When the
lower part of atmosphere is colder, and therefore heavier than the upper part,
the atmosphere is stable. Otherwise, the atmosphere gets instable. So, over
colder water there is a stable atmosphere: weak winds on sea surface and less
intense heat fluxes from the ocean to the atmosphere. If there were a chance of
passing weather fronts or cyclones in the region, that could all change, and
would make the weather forecasting fail," explains Ronald Buss de Souza,
head of Antarctic Project of INPE.
During the
INTERCONF experiment, will be launched atmospheric radiosondes and oceanic
probes, as well as conventional data collection performed by the ship’s weather
station. The data will help determine the so-called horizontal thermal
gradients of the seawater temperature under atmosphere in a synoptic scale. The
radiosondes will measure up to 20 kilometers high, while bathythermographs will
record water temperature at depths reaching two kilometers.
The meeting of
cold and warm water produces the formation of oceanic eddies, which are the
marine equivalent of atmospheric cyclones. It has been studied a system of
eddies called "dipole", where there is a coupling of a warm-core
vortex (turning counterclockwise in the southern hemisphere) and a cold-core
vortex (turning clockwise in the southern hemisphere). This system has a unique
dynamic and its impact on the atmosphere has never been investigated. Together,
warm and cold vortex in this dipole may reach a 400 kilometers diameter.
The dipole
system might last longer at sea than a single vortex system. Consequently, the
impact in the atmosphere is greater, causing changes in patterns of stability,
heat and gas flows, moisture, wind intensity, among other parameters. These
instabilities are difficult to predict by weather forecasting models existing
in the world nowadays.
Data collected
during the INTERCONF may help improve prediction models. The INPE’s researcher
says that oceanographers and meteorologists around the world are interested in
studies of ocean variability and its impacts on the atmosphere in the region of
Brazil-Malvinas Confluence. "This kind of system with two eddies is rarely
described in the literature. Due to the rarity of this phenomenon and the lack
of vessels of any country in the region at the time of its existence, during
this scientific mission we may become the first in situ observers of
these systems in this region," concludes Ronald Buss.
Another
Experiment
The INTERCONF
experiment will take place between October 12 and November 30. After collecting
data for studies on the Brazil-Malvinas Confluence, the INPE’s team will be
aboard the Polar ship Almirante Maximiano until the Deception Island,
Antarctica, to conduct another scientific experiment, this one related to the
INTERCEPTION project (Ocean-Atmosphere-Coast Micro Scale Interactions in
Deception Island, Antarctica).
The ship
itself, boats and a Brazil’s Navy helicopter will be used during the
INTERCEPTION activities, and two camps will be installed to conduct experiments
of meteorology and geological oceanography at the Bay Foster beach, in
Deception Island. During the expedition to Antarctica, researchers will also
pass through Ushuaia (the world’s most southern city), Argentina, and Punta
Arenas, Chile.
Source: WebSite of the National Institute for
Space Research (INPE)
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