About
From early January through mid-February 2020, NOAA is partnering with several universities and other programs to lead the Atlantic Tradewind Ocean–Atmosphere Mesoscale Interaction Campaign (ATOMIC). The field study will take place in the tropical North Atlantic east of Barbados and investigate cloud and air-sea interaction processes with the goal of advancing understanding and prediction of U.S. weather and climate. ATOMIC is the U.S. complement to the European field campaign called EUREC4A. This collaborative effort involves a unique combination of ships, piloted and remotely-controlled aircraft, and remotely-controlled ocean vehicles to characterize ocean and atmospheric properties. A suite of instruments will be deployed from NOAA's research ship Ronald H. Brown and WP-3D Orion "Hurricane Hunter" aircraft, and on land.
The focus area of ATOMIC is in the heart of the trade winds and representative of other regions across the global ocean with shallow convective clouds. Some of the Earth’s largest ocean eddies (circular currents) also shed into this region from the Amazon and Orinoco Rivers. Conducting the study during winter allows researchers to observe the ocean, air, and clouds in near isolation from hurricane impacts, and to gain better insight into the ocean's involvement in making clouds that affect larger weather and climate patterns.
Improved understanding of air—sea interactions in this region will help advance representations of these processes in NOAA’s model forecast systems. This effort will also improve the numerical guidance used to predict weather and climate extremes.
Partners
ATOMIC is supported by the NOAA Climate Program Office Climate Variability and Predictability Program, NOAA UAS Program, and NOAA Physical Sciences Laboratory (PSL), with additional participation from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) Physical Oceanography program. It involves scientists from PSL, NOAA's Chemical Sciences Laboratory, Atlantic Oceanographic and Meteorological Laboratory and Pacific Marine Environmental Laboratory, the University of Colorado (CIRES and IRISS), the University of Washington along with several other U.S. universities, the Caribbean Institute for Meteorology and Hydrology, and pilots and crew from the NOAA Office of Marine and Aviation Operations.
The EUREC4A campaign includes institutions from Germany, France, United Kingdom, The Netherlands, Norway, Poland, and Barbados.
Follow the Experiment
Air & Sea Chronicles: Hosted on the NOAA Research website, this blog series documents the ATOMIC mission.
In the News
- Climate.gov tweet chat: Talk with a climate and cloud expert about the ATOMIC scientific mission
- NOAA Research to Help Caribbean Prepare for Natural Disasters
- Project is Crucial
- Deployment and Operation of the RAAVEN small Unmanned Aerial System (sUAS) in Support of NOAA Science during ATOMIC
- Wave gliders, ocean drifters and drones to help international researchers solve key climate question
- ATOMIC field campaign kicks off in the tropical N. Atlantic
- NOAA Launches Major Field Campaign to Improve Weather and Climate Prediction
- ATOMIC Ocean Expedition to Improve Weather and Climate Prediction
- NOAA launches major field campaign to improve weather and climate prediction
External links to news articles are provided as a courtesy. Endorsement of non-NOAA sites is not implied.
Photo Gallery
Background
Clouds close to the surface of the ocean, called shallow convective clouds, are found around the world – but poorly represented in weather and climate models.
Shallow convection, the effects of clouds on the ocean surface energy budget, and oceanic processes are relevant to a myriad NOAA applications such as climate sensitivity, propagation of the Madden-Julian Oscillations (MJO), hurricane track and intensity, annual movement of the Intertropical Convergence Zone, midlatitude storm tracks, and marine stratocumulus cloud regions. Shallow convection is also an important issue for weather forecast models over land, with implications for convective inhibition and the initiation of thunderstorms or for solar energy forecasting. The oceanic region of interest is the middle of the Atlantic Warm Pool.
For ATOMIC, NOAA brings their unique observing platforms to complement the European field campaign, EUREC4A. NOAA’s science objectives will emphasize energy exchange between the ocean and atmosphere, and cloud–aerosol interactions. It is expected that this work will be done by NOAA in collaboration with the National Science Foundation.
The campaign has been endorsed by the World Climate Research Programme's CLIVAR project.
NOAA Ship Ronald H. Brown
NOAA WP-3D Orion aircraft
A Wave Glider and SWIFT drifting buoy
CU/IRISS RAAVEN drone
PSL Contributions
NOAA and CIRES researchers from the Physical Sciences Laboratory will collect measurements using the Air-Sea Flux System and additional oceanographic instruments aboard the NOAA Ship Ronald H. Brown. In partnership with the University of Washington, PSL will collect similar observations of near-surface atmospheric conditions, air-sea energy exchanges, waves, and the upper ocean from six drifting SWIFT drifting buoys and two Wave Gliders. On the NOAA P-3 aircraft, measurements will be taken by the W-Band cloud radar, stepped frequency microwave radiometer for wind, wide swath radar altimeter for waves, and tail Doppler X-band precipitation radar. In parnership with the University of Colorado (CIRES and IRISS), PSL's newly-developed miniFlux instrument package will fly on a small, island-based RAAVEN drone. PSL will also provide forecast guidance for planning and conduct post-experiment data and model analysis.
PSL Team
Ludovic Bariteau
CIRES Research Scientist
Gijs de Boer
CIRES Researcher (RAAVEN and P3)
Juliana Dias
Forecast Lead
Chris Fairall
Experiment Principal Investigator
Maria Gehne
CIRES Research Scientist
Mimi Hughes
Research Meteorologist
Janet Intrieri
RHB Chief Scientist Leg 2, and UAS
Ken Moran
CIRES Engineer
Jackson Osborn
Engineer
Sergio Pezoa
Engineer
Robert Pincus
CIRES Research Scientist
Roger Pulwarty
Senior Scientist
Elizabeth Thompson
Experiment Principal Investigator
Aaron Wang
CIRES Research Scientist
Robert Webb
PSL Director and Research Scientist
Meetings
Title | Dates | Materials |
---|---|---|
NOAA ATOMIC Planning Meeting, Boulder, CO | July 29-30, 2019 | Agenda Visitor Info Contacts |
Resources
ATOMIC
Documents
Presentations
- Measurements from the RV Ronald H. Brown and related platforms as part of ATOMIC (Trish Quinn, PMEL)
- Measurements from the NOAA P-3 during ATOMIC (Robert Pincus, PSL)
- ATOMIC: A Study of Shallow Convection and Ocean Coupling in the N. Atlantic (Chris Fairall, PSL)
- Overview of ATOMIC (Chris Fairall, PSL)
- Ship Observations and Autonomous Ocean/Air-Sea Observations During ATOMIC (Elizabeth Thompson, PSL)
- Planned Measurements from Unmanned Aircraft During the ATOMIC and EUREC4A Campaigns (Gijs de Boer, PSL)
- ATOMIC Modeling Overview (Juliana Dias and Robert Pincus, PSL)
EUREC4A
- EUREC4A Website
- Article on EUREC4A (Bony et al., Surveys in Geophysics, 2017)