Publication Date:
2019-01-25
Description:
The co-ordinated LANDSAT-aircraft mission flown on 16 July to the west of San Nicolas Island shows a number of interesting features. There is considerable structure in the Band 4 (0.76 to 0.90 microns) reflectance on km to 10 km scales in otherwise complete cloud cover. In extremely light winds, the C130 performed a series of runs throughout the boundary layer and above for a period of approximately 90 mins on either side of the LANDSAT overpass time. Because of the light winds, the same features can be recognized on the various aircraft penetrations and composited. Furthermore, the accurate renavigation of the aircraft positions enables these to be unambiguously related to the features seen on the LANDSAT image. Early indications suggest that the reflectance features are related to local thickenings on the cloud layer, associated with slightly deeper convection rising into the overlying stratiform deck. If this is true, then LANDSAT images could possibly be used to remotely infer aspects of the convective regime within the boundary layer. In addition, the LANDSAT images also display a quasi-linear feature extending for some 50 km, although only a km or so wide. This feature was, in fact, photographed from the C130 flying just above cloud top and termed a 'cloud-cliff'. It is clearly a rapid and sizeable local change in cloud top height and is therefore presumably a propagating feature. An explanation is still outstanding, but it appears to resemble an undular bore. Further descriptions of this unexpected feature, and its possible origin will be discussed.
Keywords:
METEOROLOGY AND CLIMATOLOGY
Type:
NASA, Langley Research Center, FIRE Science Results 1988; p 437
Format:
text
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