May 22, 2013
Journal Article

ARM Research in the Equatorial Western Pacific: A Decade and Counting

Abstract

The tropical western Pacific (TWP) is an important climatic region. Strong solar heating, warm sea surface temperatures and the annual progression of the Intertropical Convergence Zone (ITCZ) across this region generate abundant convective systems, which through their effects on the heat and water budgets have a profound impact on global climate and precipitation. To accurately represent tropical cloud systems in models, measurements of tropical clouds, the environment in which they reside, and their impact on the radiation and water budgets are needed. Because of the remote location, ground-based datasets of cloud, atmosphere, and radiation properties from the TWP region have traditionally come primarily from short-term field experiments. While providing extremely useful information on physical processes, these datasets are limited in statistical and climatological information because of their short duration. To provide long-term measurements of the surface radiation budget in the tropics, and the atmospheric properties that affect it, the Atmospheric Radiation Measurement program established a measurement site on Manus Island, Papua New Guinea in 1996 and on the island republic of Nauru in late 1998. These sites provide unique datasets available from more than 10 years of operation in the equatorial western Pacific on Manus and Nauru. We present examples of the scientific use of these datasets including characterization of cloud properties, analysis of cloud radiative forcing, model studies of tropical clouds and processes, and validation of satellite algorithms. We also note new instrumentation recently installed at the Manus site that will expand opportunities for tropical atmospheric science.

Revised: June 4, 2013 | Published: May 22, 2013

Citation

Long C.N., S.A. McFarlane, A.D. Del Genio, P. Minnis, T.P. Ackerman, J.H. Mather, and J.M. Comstock, et al. 2013. ARM Research in the Equatorial Western Pacific: A Decade and Counting. Bulletin of the American Meteorological Society 94, no. 5:695-708. PNNL-SA-86010. doi:10.1175/BAMS-D-11-00137.1