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Thunderstorms And Ozone Examined In National Center For Atmospheric Research Study

Posted: 05/06/2012 10:20 pm Updated: 05/06/2012 10:21 pm

From Becky Oskin, OurAmazingPlanet Contributor


Thunderstorms not only clobber the Earth's surface with heavy rain and lightning, they also shake things up at cloud level.

This spring, scientists at the National Center for Atmospheric Research and other organizations will explore what happens when storms bring air from Earth's surface many miles up into the atmosphere using research aircraft, mobile radars and lightning mapping arrays.

One of the project's key goals is examining the role of thunderstorms in making upper-atmosphere ozone, a greenhouse gas that has a particularly strong warming effect high in the atmosphere and is tricky to track. (Ozone higher up in the atmosphere forms the familiar ozone layer that protects the planet's surface from harmful UV rays.)

"When thunderstorms form, air near the ground has nowhere to go but up," said NCAR scientist Mary Barth, a principal investigator on the project. "Suddenly you have an air mass at high altitude that's full of chemicals that can produce ozone."

The Deep Convective Clouds and Chemistry (DC3) experiment, which begins in mid-May, is the first to take a comprehensive look at the chemistry and thunderstorm details, including air movement, cloud physics and electrical activity. The experiment will examine the influence of thunderstorms on air just beneath the stratosphere, a little-explored region that influences Earth's climate and weather patterns.

Updrafts within thunderstorm clouds travel at about 20 to 100 mph (about 30 to 160 kph), so air arrives at the top of the troposphere with its pollutants relatively intact. (The troposphere extends from Earth's surface to about 6 to 10 miles (10 to 16 kilometers) in altitude and is where most weather happens.) The polluted air masses stop rising because of a barrier between the troposphere and stratosphere called the tropopause.

"The tropopause is like a wall," Barth said. "The air bumps into it and spreads out."

The DC3 scientists will fly through updraft plumes to collect data as a storm is under way. Then they'll fly through the same air mass the next day, using its distinctive chemical signature to see how it's changed over time.

Scientists will also study both how storms produce lightning as well as how to use lightning- mapping data to improve storm forecasts and warnings. [Images: Electric Earth]

"The internal structures of thunderstorms — and the lightning that accompanies them — differ considerably across the country," said Brad Smull, National Science Foundation program director for physical and dynamic meteorology. "This in turn affects the chemical processes occurring inside these storms."

The DC3 investigators will be based at three sites in northern Alabama, northeastern Colorado and central Oklahoma to west Texas. Flying from multiple sites will enable the scientists to study different types of atmospheric environments.

Funding for DC3 comes from the National Science Foundation, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and NASA. The scientists leading the project are from NCAR, Pennsylvania State University, Colorado State University and NOAA, with involvement by more than 100 researchers from 26 organizations.

Follow OurAmazingPlanet for the latest in Earth science and exploration news on Twitter @OAPlanet and on Facebook.



Copyright 2012 OurAmazingPlanet, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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From Becky Oskin, OurAmazingPlanet Contributor Thunderstorms not only clobber the Earth's surface with heavy rain and lightning, they also shake things up at cloud level. This spring...
From Becky Oskin, OurAmazingPlanet Contributor Thunderstorms not only clobber the Earth's surface with heavy rain and lightning, they also shake things up at cloud level. This spring...
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RSGmusic
Instrumental music is great
09:26 PM on 05/07/2012
plans includingdog, Son of 1776 will not be able to!

they do not believe and that is it! No futher discussion is needed and they close down.

Good health to You and Yours always
06:30 PM on 05/07/2012
Interesting stuff. Global warming is real, folks.
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Reality always bites
Sometimes just a bit peckish
04:22 PM on 05/07/2012
OOps- The ozone argument has resurfaced and put all the global warming alarmists into a tizzy!
The indoctrinated youth of today have not had the privilege of living through a real war, a cold war or coming ice age scares, gulf stream shift scares and nuclear armaggedon!
To them real war is in a faraway country and against men who wear funny headgear.
Nuclear armageddon is Chernobyl and Fukishima.
And the ozone holes are a natural occurence so it is OK.
Global warming is a rebalance of the cooling that happened earlier.
However if that is wrong you can always make a bunker using some cardboard boxes and the kitchen table (Stock up on tinned food)
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Son of Liberty 1765
Exposing Government Lies.
07:59 AM on 05/07/2012
More studies that won't mean a hill of beans to civilization.
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blackwind
Relax, nothing is under control
02:38 PM on 05/07/2012
Information based on scientific studies is what built modern civilization.
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Son of Liberty 1765
Exposing Government Lies.
03:22 PM on 05/07/2012
No study on ozone ever brought us a dime or built even a mousetrap.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
04:01 AM on 05/08/2012
The founder were Locke liberals fighting against the Burke conservative 1% rich with their multinationals and they bribing of the empire. That was East India Tea they dumped, not gov tea.

The founders were men of science, and the enlightenment.

Yet you reject the democracy spending resources studying the atmospheric and how weather works, as if that was of no value, as if our dumping 100 times the CO2 and junk into the atmosphere won't change it, as if we could live without it.

Wake up.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
07:16 AM on 05/07/2012
So whats new about this? More information printed on HuffPo that is unnecessary? I think so.
Genders
Love, Tolerance, Enlightenment
04:01 AM on 05/08/2012
You don't seem to think at all.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
10:41 PM on 05/06/2012
Too bad they can't ask my third grade teacher all of these questions. She knew all of the answers, but she died 30 years ago. She told us how clouds are formed, and electrically charged fields are created and that lightening goes from the ground up to the clouds to discharge. Also that lightening "creates" ammonia from nitrogen and hydrogen to fertilize. We also learned about global warming and climate change. We learned about precipitation and how changes in temperatures cause wind. We learned how ozone was created and how it protects us from UV.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
June25
10:55 PM on 05/06/2012
Strange I remember back then the fear was the coming ice age.
01:04 AM on 05/07/2012
Good luck with that false canard. What you are probably remembering are the aftereffects of hallucinogenic research.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
WESmith
Energy Conservation can save you M-O-N-E-Y!!!!!!!!
01:30 AM on 05/07/2012
That was the 70s and 80s when Exxon was lying to us about how the average global temperature was rising and that we should use science technology to become energy efficient and conserve.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
wtf is this
It depends.
10:05 PM on 05/07/2012
Wow -- you learned that well. Good teacher!