Mr. Jury et al., AIRCRAFT SECTION MEASUREMENTS OF METEOROLOGY AND OZONE IN NORTHERN NAMIBIA DURING SAFARI-92, JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-ATMOSPHERES, 101(D19), 1996, pp. 23713-23720
Ozone and meteorological data obtained via instrumented aircraft surve
ys over tropical southwestern Africa in the period October 8-12, 1992,
are analyzed as part of the international Southern African Fire-Atmos
phere Research Initiative (SAFARI) program. Twice-daily aircraft fligh
ts recorded measurements of wind, turbulence, temperature, dewpoint, a
nd ozone at 1 Hz from 1-12 km in a series of successive profiles exten
ding from 12 degrees to 24 degrees E along 18 degrees S latitude. Wind
patterns derived from aircraft and the European Centre for Medium-Ran
ge Weather Forecasts (ECMWF) highlight a quasi-permanent anticyclone i
n the midtroposphere over central southern Africa. Light meridional fl
ow prevailed in the 3-7 km layer. Ozone values were in the range 40-60
parts per billion by volume (ppbv) from 1 to 4 km across the aircraft
section and <20 ppbv in the surface marine layer off the west coast.
In the continental air, ozone increased with height to 90 ppbv above 7
km. As a dry trough passed eastward, ozone values declined 30% in the
layer above 4 km. Aircraft results indicate the presence of a potenti
al recirculation mechanism around the midtropospheric anticyclone. Rec
irculation would facilitate photochemical reduction to ozone of region
al pyrogenic emissions, following vertical mixing by turbulent diurnal
heating. A persistent dry stable layer from 6 to 9 km may accumulate
pollutants over tropical southern Africa, while upper westerly troughs
could eject some of the continental air eastward.