|
THE
NOAA AERONOMY LABORATORY:
UNDERSTANDING OUR COMPLEX ATMOSPHERE
January
15, 2004— The NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory
was formed nearly 40 years ago to conduct scientific research on the Earth's
atmosphere in an effort to better understand and predict its behavior.
That perhaps unfamiliar name — "aeronomy"
— has Greek origins and means "the study of the atmospheres
of planets." The Aeronomy Laboratory focus is, of course, on Planet
Earth. Specifically, the Aeronomy Laboratory's mission has been the study
of the chemical, radiative and dynamical processes of the Earth's
atmosphere, in order to improve the ability to predict its behavior. Today,
the Aeronomy Laboratory’s research focuses on the following three
atmospheric issues (Click on image below for a larger view of
these atmospheric issues):
-
Climate Change: Chemical Composition, Radiation and Clouds,
- Regional
Air Chemistry and
- Stratospheric
Ozone-Layer Recovery.
For all three
areas, one hallmark of the Aeronomy Laboratory is its overarching efforts
to relate scientific findings to the information needs of decisionmakers,
via leadership and participation in state-of-understanding assessment
reports on the topics. Approximately 110 scientists, engineers, computer
specialists, postdoctoral and student researchers and administrative support
staff are engaged in these endeavors at the David Skaggs Research Center
in Boulder, Colo.
Understanding
Atmospheric Processes: Answering the "How?" and "Why?"
Questions
On the broadest level, the Aeronomy Laboratory's focus on the
atmospheric sciences is intended to advance the scientific understanding
of atmospheric processes, with the aim of enhancing the capability to
observe, understand and predict the behavior of the atmosphere. The chemical,
radiative and dynamical processes of the atmosphere are the gears, belts
and pulleys of atmospheric change. As such, their identification and characterization
are necessary for understanding and predicting the behavior of regional
and global phenomena, which is at the heart of NOAA's mission.
From 1965 to Present: Providing a Scientific Information Service for National
and International Decisionmakers
Although the specific scientific issues addressed by the Aeronomy
Laboratory's research have evolved over the years, its guiding principle
has remained steadfast — to meet the nation's most-pressing
needs for scientific information about the atmosphere and its relation
to the activities of humankind.
- An
Early Focus on the Upper Atmosphere — Chemistry and Radio Waves:
In response to the nation's need for scientific information to advance
radio communications and matters of national security, the Aeronomy
Laboratory initially focused on the chemistry and motions of the upper
atmosphere's ionosphere. For more than a decade, the Aeronomy Laboratory
provided national and international scientific leadership in the field
of ion-molecule chemistry, a process that governs the transmission of
radio waves in the upper atmosphere. The information served two major
customers: the National military and security sector, and the national
and global telecommunications industry. Over a relatively short period
of time in the 1960s and 1970s, the Aeronomy Laboratory scientists and
their colleagues succeeded in characterizing the major aspects of the
chemistry of the ionosphere. Atmospheric understanding thus "caught
up" with emerging new technological capabilities, thereby meeting
a critical national need.
- Meeting
New National Needs for Middle and Lower Atmospheric Information —
Our Ozone-layer Shield:
In the 1970s, when stratospheric
ozone depletion and acidic deposition emerged as high priority national
environmental issues, the Aeronomy Laboratory's research shifted in
that direction. The focus therefore became the chemistry of the lowest
two layers of the atmosphere — the troposphere and stratosphere.
The laboratory again provided scientific leadership in this area, ultimately
conducting the research that led to discovering that the cause of the
Antarctic ozone hole was human-produced chlorine-containing and bromine-containing
substances (as opposed to other hypothesized causes, such as solar activity).
The information was provided to the nations that are parties to the
United Nations' international agreement (the Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer) and contributed
to the decision of those nations to strengthen provisions for the protection
of the ozone layer.
- Today's
Priorities —
Climate and Air Quality: Over the last decade, the Aeronomy
Laboratory's research has shifted its focus to the chemical processes
that control the characteristics of greenhouse
gases and aerosols (airborne fine particles) in the lower atmosphere
and surface-level
ozone pollution. Climate and air quality are two topics that are
a high priority for decisionmakers at all levels (private sector, state,
national and international). Once again, the Aeronomy Laboratory's scientific
research builds the firm foundation for their decisions. One example
of how the Aeronomy Laboratory assists decision makers today is by identifying
unexpected factors that cause a region's particular air pollution episodes
—
information that enables state agencies to develop the most effective
and most economical approaches to improving air quality.
This brief
history clearly illustrates that the Aeronomy Laboratory's scientific
direction is dynamic, not static. As new scientific questions arise (that
are consistent with NOAA's mission and planning), the laboratory changes
direction to address those issues —
thereby significantly contributing to national scientific needs.
Aeronomy
Laboratory Research Approaches: Integration and Synergies
The Aeronomy Laboratory's research involves the integration of the following
three approaches:
- Investigations
under controlled conditions in the laboratory,
- Field
measurements in a variety of environments (both in campaign mode and
via regular observations) and
- Regional
and global theoretical/diagnostic analyses.
A hallmark
of the Aeronomy Laboratory is the integration of these three endeavors
to build a better predictive understanding. Specifically, the investigations
in the laboratory characterize properties of chemical reactions, which
are used both in predictive models and as a test bed for the development
of new analytical techniques. Field campaigns provide the observations
to test the predictive capabilities of models, as well as unknown processes
that should be examined in the laboratory. Diagnostic models, via sensitivity
studies, evaluate the impact of processes on the global picture, investigate
which chemical processes would have the biggest payoff for laboratory
investigations, as well as help guide the design of regional or global
field campaigns.
Accomplishments
Awards
and Recognition: Over the years, the accomplishments of Aeronomy
Laboratory scientists have been recognized within NOAA, by the nation
and on the international level. Its scientists have received the NOAA
Administrator's Award, the Department of Commerce Gold Medal, the Presidential
Rank Award, the National Medal of Science, membership in the National
Academy of Sciences and awards from the United Nations Environment Programme.
- Service
as Leaders:
Aeronomy Laboratory scientists have been asked to serve in scientific
leadership roles, such as chairmanship of the Science Working Group
of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate
Change, the Scientific Assessment Panel of the United Nations Montreal
Protocol on the ozone layer and the Air Quality Research Subcommittee
of the administration's Committee on Environment and Natural Resources.
Aeronomy Laboratory scientists have also been asked to serve in leadership
positions on special-focus committees of professional societies (such
as the American Meteorological Society and the National Academy of Sciences-National
Research Council) and on scientific steering committees of international
research programs (e.g., the World Climate Research Programme's Stratospheric
Processes and Their Role in Climate (SPARC) project and the International
Global Atmospheric Chemistry Project).
- Signature
accomplishments of the Aeronomy Laboratory include:
- Characterization
of the chemistry of the Earth's upper atmosphere, thus enabling
a new age in the understanding and prediction of communications
and in matters of national security;
- Discovery
of the cause of the Antarctic ozone hole, and the communication
of that information to world governments to underpin their decisions
regarding protection of the ozone layer;
- Discovery
of the capability of Doppler radar profilers to determine atmospheric
wind profiles, a technology that now is a key element of the suite
of weather observations that underlie NOAA's weather forecasts;
- Identification
of the relative roles of natural and human-produced compounds in
the production of tropospheric ozone pollution, information that
has helped state agencies to develop more effective and less expensive
air quality improvement measures that avoid costly overregulation;
and
- Ongoing
since the 1980s, extensive roles in leading, authoring, reviewing,
editing and/or publishing international scientific state-of-understanding
assessments on three topics: the climate system, pollutant ozone
and fine particles, and the stratospheric ozone layer. These information
products provide key scientific input to pending national and international
decisions regarding these three important issues.
- Recent
Aeronomy Laboratory accomplishments include the following:
Used
a new instrument developed at the Aeronomy Laboratory to obtain the
first chemical "fingerprint" of the individual aerosol particles
that are effective in causing cloud formation. PAYOFF:
By identifying the chemical makeup of the less than 1 percent of ambient
particles that are effective cloud condensation nuclei, this research
will improve the capabilities of NOAA's Climate Services Program to
predict cloud formation, thereby enabling more accurate model estimates
of the climate and radiative implications;
- Discovered
new factors that cause ozone pollution in Houston, Texas, showing
that leaks of reactive gases from the petrochemical refineries prevalent
in the region are a much larger factor than previously expected. PAYOFF:
These research results have altered the policy approach taken by Texas
air quality managers, at a savings of 65,000 jobs and $10 billion
by the year 2010 for the state, and are an example of key discoveries
needed by NOAA for improved air quality forecasting; and
Analyzed
past and recent observations to show that tropospheric ozone levels
in trans-Pacific air reaching the U.S. West Coast from Asia have increased
by about 30 percent near the Earth’s surface over the past two
decades, demonstrating that a "natural," unperturbed Pacific
no longer exists. PAYOFF: The increase in this greenhouse
gas influences the radiative forcing of climate and also has implications
for regional air quality on the U.S. West Coast.
Research
Partnerships
The Aeronomy
Laboratory works with the University of Colorado’s Cooperative
Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences. This Joint Institute
was established in 1967 to provide a setting for collaborative research
and teaching in the wide-ranging disciplines of the environmental sciences.
Over half of the Aeronomy Laboratory's researchers are affiliated with
CIRES.
The Aeronomy
Laboratory also has research and scientific leadership partnerships with
colleagues from other NOAA Research
laboratories and other NOAA
line offices. For example, the Aeronomy Laboratory is working with
the NOAA National Weather Service
to develop a new NOAA forecasting service for air quality. The Aeronomy
Laboratory also works extensively with external collaborators, such as
the cooperative institute AIRMAP in New Hampshire, other federal agencies,
private industry and scores of universities and organizations worldwide.
What’s
Next for the Aeronomy Laboratory?
A continued focus on NOAA's information mission; the Aeronomy Laboratory's
research contributes to two of the goals in the new NOAA
Strategic Plan: Climate (Goal 2) and Weather and Water (Goal 3). In
addition, the Aeronomy Laboratory is serving in major leadership roles
within NOAA's program management and planning. Aeronomy Laboratory scientists
are leading two of the 39 program areas of NOAA. Aeronomy Laboratory Director,
Daniel L. Albritton, is the program manager for the Climate Forcing program
of NOAA's Climate Program and research scientist, James Meagher, is the
program manager for the Air Quality Program within the Weather and Water
goal.
Future
Scientific Challenges
Some of the major scientific challenges that the Aeronomy Laboratory will
continue to face in the next decade are:
- Climate
Change —Chemical Composition, Radiation, and Clouds
- How
well do we understand the role of aerosol processes in controlling
radiation, the formation and chemistry of clouds and the alteration
of atmospheric chemical composition?
- What
is the role of intercontinental transport and chemical transformation
in regional atmospheres and global climate?
- How
well do we understand the radiative effects of water vapor and trace
gases in the atmosphere?
Regional
Air Chemistry
- What
are the factors (such as nighttime chemistry and sea-to-land transport)
that contribute to ozone pollution in New England?
- What
measurements and diagnostic analyses are needed as the scientific
foundation for the emerging NOAA air quality forecasting service?
- What
regionally-dependent factors influence the formation of atmospheric
fine particles and their chemical composition across the chemically-diverse
U.S.?
- Stratospheric
Ozone Layer Recovery
- How
best can we anticipate, detect and interpret the recovery of the
global ozone layer and the Antarctic ozone hole?
- How
will climate change affect the ultimate recovery state of the ozone
layer, and how will changes in the ozone layer affect climate?
- What
is the "ozone friendliness" and "climate friendliness"
of the series of proposed substitutes (e.g., the new very short-lived
species) for the now-banned ozone-depleting compounds?
What
is the Expectation for the Longer Term?
The
future is one of more people, ever-increasing standards of living and
more numerous technologies. The demands on Earth's resources will undoubtedly
go up, rather than down. Therefore, the chemical stresses on the atmosphere
will likely increase, driving the value of scientific information about
the atmosphere even higher than it is today. As a result, it is foreseeable
that the future holds a "bull market" for NOAA's atmospheric
information service. For its part, the Aeronomy Laboratory will continue
to provide its trademark end-to-end service:
-
Discovery of
new scientific information about atmospheric processes that underlie
key environmental issues facing the nation and
- Delivery
of those discoveries to NOAA's operations and services, as
well as to decisionmakers in the national and international arenas.
Relevant
Web Sites
NOAA
Aeronomy Laboratory
"Aeronomy"
Defined
"Why
We Do What We Do" - NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory
Aeronomy
Laboratory Newsletter, On the Air!
"How
We Do What We Do" - NOAA Aeronomy Laboratory
NOAA
Aeronomy Lab Accomplishments and Plans
Intergovernmental
Panel on Climate Change
Cooperative
Institute for Research in Environmental Sciences
NOAA
Research
A
WORD ABOUT NOAA...
NOAA
National Weather Service
NOAA
Strategic Plan
2004
New England Air Quality Study
NOAA
WP-3D aircraft
NOAA
Ship R/V Ronald H. Brown
2002
WMO/UNEP Scientific Assessment of the Ozone Layer
Media
Contact:
Jana
Goldman, NOAA Research,
(301) 713-2483
|