Publication | Closed Access
SAGE I and SAM II Measurements of 1 μm Aerosol Extinction in the Free Troposphere
18
Citations
6
References
1988
Year
EngineeringSam Ii MeasurementsAir QualityμM Aerosol ExtinctionEarth ScienceAerosol ExtinctionAerosol TransportAtmospheric ScienceMicrometeorologyAerosol SamplingAtmospheric SensingSam-ii Satellite SensorsHigh Altitude CloudsAtmospheric InteractionAerosol FormationRadiation MeasurementFree TroposphereSpace WeatherClimate DynamicsAtmospheric Impact AssessmentAtmospheric ProcessAir Pollution
The SAGE-I and SAM-II satellite sensors were designed to measure, with global coverage, the 1 μm extinction produced by the stratospheric aerosol. In the absence of high altitude clouds, similar measurements may be made for the free tropospheric aerosol. Median extinction values at middle and high latitudes in the Northern Hemisphere, for altitudes between 5 and 10 km, are found to be one-half to one order of magnitude greater than values at corresponding latitudes in the Southern Hemisphere. In addition, a seasonal increase by a factor of 1.5–2 was observed in both hemispheres, in 1979–80, in local spring and summer. Following major volcanic eruptions, a long-lived enhancement of the aerosol extinction is observed for altitudes above 5 km.
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