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SAMBBA: in-situ airborne observations by the FAAM BAE-146 aircraft

In-situ airborne observations by the FAAM BAE-146 aircraft for South AMerican Biomass Burning Analysis (SAMBBA).



SAMBBA project - a UK-Brasil Consortium funded by NERC. Biomass burning aerosols have a significant influence on climate – both directly as they scatter and absorb solar radiation – and indirectly as they influence cloud optical properties and lifetime through their ability to act as sites for cloud droplet formation. Biomass burning aerosols are a complex mixture of black carbon, organic carbon, and inorganic compounds, and are thus difficult to model accurately. While parameterisations have been developed in the climate version of the UM (e.g. HADGEM-2) that enable reasonable representation of the aerosol optical depth, significant uncertainties still exists in accurately determining the aerosol absorption (via the single scattering albedo) and the subsequent effects on radiation. These radiative effects have a significant impact on climate, which needs to be quantified over key regions such as Amazonia. Furthermore, BB aerosols have a direct impact on the performance of numerical weather prediction models. The effects of biomass burning aerosol upon cloud microphysical and optical properties play a significant role in assessing the radiative influence of clouds. These are also processes that are poorly quantified and hence provide fundamental uncertainties in weather forecasts and climate change scenarios. To improve quantification of these uncertainties, the microphysical and chemical properties of biomass burning aerosol and its precursors need to be determined yet these remain uncertain and are known to be modified during their lifetime in the atmosphere. Furthermore, it is important to assess the background state of the atmosphere in the region to understand the influence such large anthropogenic perturbations are having on the region. However, aerosol particles in the natural tropical atmosphere remain poorly understood.



The aim of the SAMBBA project was to investigate the properties of biomass burning aerosols over South America. The main biomass burning season occurs during Sept/Oct when deforestation fires and agricultural burning are prolific, particularly over central and south eastern parts of Brazil. These contribute to high loadings of biomass burning aerosol over much of South America with aerosol optical depths frequently exceeding 1 in many central parts of the continent. SAMBBA was a consortium of 7 university groups, the UK Met Office and a number of Brazilian partners, which delivered a suite of ground, aircraft and satellite measurements of Amazonian BBA and use this data to:



-improve our knowledge of BB emissions;

-challenge and improve the latest aerosol process models;

-challenge and improve satellite retrievals;

-test predictions of aerosol influences on regional climate and weather over Amazonia and the surrounding regions made using the next generation of climate and NWP models with extensive prognostic aerosol schemes; and

-assess the impact of biomass burning on the Amazonian biosphere.

Simple

Date (Publication)
2014-07-14T13:38:13
Date (Creation)
2014-07-14T13:38:13
Citation identifier
https://catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/uuid/2ff89840a89840868acff801f8859451
Citation identifier
NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre (NCAS BADC) / 2ff89840a89840868acff801f8859451
Point of contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

Facility for Airborne Atmospheric Measurements (FAAM)

unknown

Author

Natural Environment Research Council (NERC)

unknown

Author

Met Office

enquiries@metoffice.gov.uk

Author

Unavailable

Coe, Hugh

Unavailable

Author

NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre (NCAS BADC)

badc@rl.ac.uk

Custodian

NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre (NCAS BADC)

badc@rl.ac.uk

Distributor

NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre (NCAS BADC)

badc@rl.ac.uk

pointofContact

NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre (NCAS BADC)

badc@rl.ac.uk

Publisher
Maintenance and update frequency
Unknown
Update scope
Series
Keywords
  • SAMBBA

  • FAAM

  • airborne

  • atmospheric measurments

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

  • atmospheric conditions

Access constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
All data within this dataset collection are available to any registered CEDA user.
Use constraints
Other restrictions
Other constraints
Under the following licence http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/, appropriate use of these data may fall under any use. This message is intended as guidance, always read the full licence. When using these data you must cite them correctly using the citation given on the CEDA Data Catalogue record.
Spatial representation type
Grid
Language
English
Topic category
  • Climatology, meteorology, atmosphere
N
S
E
W
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Begin date
2012-08-28T09:31:49
End date
2012-10-03T21:40:10
Unique resource identifier
WGS 84
Distribution format
Name Version

Contact data centre for format details.

Distributor contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre (NCAS BADC)

badc@rl.ac.uk

Distributor
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name
https://catalogue.ceda.ac.uk/uuid/2ff89840a89840868acff801f8859451

CEDA Data Catalogue Page

OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name
http://badc.nerc.ac.uk/conditions/sambba_data.html

SAMBBA Conditions of Use

OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name
http://www.cas.manchester.ac.uk/resprojects/sambba/

SAMBBA - South AMerican Biomass Burning Analysis

Hierarchy level
Series

Conformance result

Title

Commission Regulation (EU) No 1089/2010 of 23 November 2010 implementing Directive 2007/2/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council as regards interoperability of spatial data sets and services

Date (Publication)
2010-12-08
Statement

Please see data lineage statements for each dataset within this collection for data lineage details.

Metadata

File identifier
2ff89840a89840868acff801f8859451 XML
Metadata language
English
Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Series
Hierarchy level name

series

Date stamp
2025-12-04T03:27:17
Metadata standard name
UK GEMINI
Metadata standard version

2.3

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

NCAS British Atmospheric Data Centre (NCAS BADC)

badc@rl.ac.uk

Point of contact
 
 

Overviews

Spatial extent

thumbnail

Keywords

GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0

atmospheric conditions


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