A Better Understanding of Climate Change: Researchers Study Cloud Movement in the Arctic

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Special features of the Arctic climate, such as the strong reflection of the sun’s rays off the light snow or the low position of the sun, amplify global warming in the Arctic.

Special features of the Arctic climate, such as the strong reflection of the sun’s rays off the light snow or the low position of the sun, amplify global warming in the Arctic. However, researchers are often faced with the challenge of modelling the underlying climatic processes in order to be able to provide reliable weather forecasts. Scientists from the HALO (AC)³ aircraft campaign have succeeded in precisely measuring the movement of air masses from and to the Arctic. This will contribute to a better understanding of the processes accelerating climate change in the region. Their research has been published in a European Geosciences Union paper.

“We want to make fundamental and ground-breaking progress in our understanding of Arctic amplification and improve the reliability of models for predicting the dramatic warming in the Arctic,” says Professor Manfred Wendisch, Director of the Institute for Meteorology at Leipzig University and lead author of the study. In mid-March 2022, the large-scale international research campaign HALO (AC)³ began its investigation of changes in air masses in the Arctic. Researchers from Leipzig University and several other research institutions are involved.

During the campaign, they used special aircraft to study the movement of air masses to and from the Arctic via northward moist- and warm-air intrusions (WAIs) and southward marine cold-air outbreaks (CAOs). Two low-flying aircraft and one long-range, high-altitude research aircraft were flown in close formation whenever possible. “We observed air mass transformations over areas of open ocean, the marginal sea ice zone and the central Arctic sea ice,” says Wendisch.

Read more at Universität Leipzig

Image: The HALO aircraft in the Arctic. (Credit: Leipzig University)