CASES 97: Observing and Modeling the Effects of Soil Moisture
on the Diurnal Behavior of the Atmospheric Boundary Layer
From 22 April to 22 May 1997 the first expedition to the CASES site
was made by boundary layer and radar meteorology scientists from
Universities and government laboratories. For further information
on the CASES site, collaborators, and philosophy, please contact the
CASES website (
http://www.mmm.ucar.edu/cases).
The broad objectives
of the expedition were two-fold: a) observe and model the effects of
soil moisture on the fair weather boundary layer's diurnal cycle and b)
Begin a determination of the relationship between S-band polarized radar
signals, NEXRAD radar signals, and observed rainfall. The two objectives
covered most of the weather events that occurred during the expedition.
Data from the following instrumentation will be available by 22 May 98
at the latest:
- Winds and RASS virtual temperature from three 915 MHz/sodar profilers
arranged in a triangle covering the southern two-thirds of the Walnut
River Watershed apprx. 20 miles east of Wichita, KS. These Profilers
and two surface flux stations are part of the Argonne Boundary Layer
Experiment (ABLE; see http://gonzalo.er.anl.gov/ABLE/,
which is the
backbone of CASES. These profilers have continued to operate after
CASES97.
- Cross-chain Loran Sounding System (NCAR) rawindsondes were collocated
with the ABLE Profilers and launched every 90 minutes during 24-hour
Intensive Operation Periods (IOP). CLASS sondes were released twice
a day during non-IOP days. These sondes measured wind, temperature,
humidity, and pressure. Sondes were equilibrated with local surface
conditions before release.
- 12 Eddy correlation surface flux stations located on surfaces which
comprised most of the primary land-use over the watershed. The top land
surface types were: prairie grass (grazed and ungrazed) which dominated
the land area east of the north-south running Walnut River, winter
wheat crop-land and tilled but unplanted crop-land which dominated the
land area west of the Walnut River. In one or two cases, stations were
located on similar land surface types at similar and different elevations
to check for similarity and elevation differences. The surface fluxes
measured were: sensible heat, moisture, and momentum. One station
measured CO2 flux. All of the stations observed the surface energy
balance including radiative terms, soil temperature, infra-red surface
temperature, and SOIL MOISTURE. Two of eight NCAR stations measured soil
moisture profiles to approx. 0.8 m depth; one of those NCAR stations,
over a greening up field of prairie grass, measured a greenness index
related to NDVI. Two stations (one from ABLE and one from ARM/CART)
continue to operate after the expedition.
- Two aircraft platforms, the NSF-Univ. Wyoming King Air and the
NOAA/Air Resources Lab Twin Otter were present. These aircraft carried
similar instrument packages to measure atmospheric temperature,
humidity, pressure, winds, up and down-welling short and longwave
radiation, IR "surface" temperature, and video records of ground surface
overflown. These aircraft also carried "turbulence" packages capable
of observing rapid fluctuations of vertical wind, horizontal wind,
temperature, and humidity that can be combined to estimate vertical
fluxes of sensible heat, moisture, and momentum; the NOAA aircraft
also measured CO2 fluctuations, CO2 flux, and cloud condensation nuclei
particle distributions. The two aircraft flew coordinated missions on
IOPs 1-5 while the NSF King Air flew alone on remaining IOPs.
- S-band Polarized Radar system (SPOL) from NCAR was present. It has
the capability to determine precipitation type as well as rate and
Doppler air motion. Using insects as targets, air motions in clear air
were also measured. The radar was able to observe sharp gradients in
humidity and thus was able to give estimates of boundary layer height.
- Digital all-sky imager/laser ceilometer combination from NOAA/ETL
was near one of the surface flux towers located in a winter wheat
field. This instrument operated continuously.
- Satellite retrievals of NDVI and standard images.
- Stream-flow information routinely collected by NOAA within the watershed.
Experimental Design was as follows:
- IOPs were carried out only for fair-weather situations; there
were four full IOPs (each covering an entire 24-hr period) and 3
partial IOPs (covering either the morning transition from stable
to unstable conditions or the evening transition from unstable to
stable conditions). Except for the last IOP, NO LOWER CLOUDS WERE
OBSERVED. However, scattered to broken cirrus was present for most of
the IOPs.
- IOPs were separated by convective weather events ranging
from scattered showers to mesoscale convective systems containing
tornadoes. This gave CASES97 a wide range of soil moisture conditions
ranging from water standing in fields to spotty conditions during
dry-down periods.
- Substantial greening of prairie grass was observed over the month
the expedition was in the watershed. Winter wheat was already green
but grew taller during the period. For the first two IOPs considerable
field burning was observed resulting in a very hazy situation compared
to later IOPs. The intensity of the burning was unexpected.
- During an IOP, CLASS soundings were launched every 90 minutes.
- Aircraft flight tracks sampled the horizontal and vertical structure
of the atmosphere. Horizontal structure was observed by flying constant
pressure (pressure altitude) between the Profiler/CLASS sites making
up a triangle covering the lower two-thirds of the watershed; an
intercomparison leg was flown from the aircraft base in Ponca City, OK
(50-60 nm south of the watershed) to the southern-most profiler. This
will allow for comparison of aircraft and profiler winds as well
as estimates of gradients to the south (important during south wind
periods). Vertical structure was sampled in three ways:
- ramp and spiral soundings to observe mixed layer height
changes with time as well as detailed vertical structure.
- stacks within the triangle of profilers of 3-5 level legs
depending upon the depth of the mixed layer. This was done to
observe the shape of the flux profile and estimate the flux
divergence term of the budget equations for sensible heat,
moisture and momentum. Some legs were flown in the inversion
layer to obtain fluxes and conditions above the mixed layer as
well as sample portions of the inversion layer with observed
radar "structures".
- vertical race-track patterns which sampled only the lowest
level (apprx. 30m above ground) and a level just below the
mixed layer height (varied from 200m to 1.7 km). This pattern
supplemented the stack pattern in order to track time changes
of the near-surface fluxes and near-inversion fluxes (also
known as entrainment flux).
For further information, please contact either
Bob Grossman or
Peggy LeMone.