Meteorological, micrometeorological and radiation data from Jang Bogo Station (SAMEECA)
The current vision of global climatic changes stresses on the interlinked action of many factors, often more evident at regional scales. Polar regions are among the areas most sensitive to perturbations of the climate: through connections involving ocean, atmosphere, biosphere, lithosphere and cryosphere, they respond to, amplify, and drive changes elsewhere in the Earth system, so that understanding their role is essential. Peculiar characteristics of Polar Regions contribute to modify the energy and radiation budget, and the characteristics of the polar atmospheric boundary layer (ABL), increasing relevance at regional level of coupling processes between components of the climate system, especially in the coastal region. In particular, the long polar night, the sea-ice and snow coverage, favouring the persistency of stable atmospheric conditions, and the local and mesoscale circulation interactions, all affect the status and variability at different time scales of components of the regional climate system. Predicting future conditions of the polar regions is the goal of the Polar Prediction Project and of one of its key elements, the Year of Polar Prediction (YOPP, http://www.polarprediction.net/yopp.html), scheduled to take place from mid-2017 to mid-2019). This requires the scientific knowledge of their present status as well as a process-based understanding of the mechanisms of change. The parameterization of physical processes in regional and global hydrodynamical numerical models of the atmosphere is not yet enough accurate for a correct representation of all components of the climatic system and of their connections, the knowledge of which is needed to determine the role of polar regions in the global climate. As an example, more extended and integrated dataset are required to improve the parameterization of the ABL, for complex orography areas such as the polar coastal regions.
The general scope of this project is to improve the understanding of the surface-atmosphere mass and energy exchanges at an Antarctic coastal site in the Ross Sea through continuous and accurate measurements of the atmospheric parameters, and development and verification of multiscale modelling, and through these activities, to address some of the relevant questions included in the roadmap for Antarctic and Southern Ocean science for the next two decades and beyond. Measurements will be carried out year-round at the new Korean Jang Bogo Antarctic Research Station (JBS), located at the coast of Terra Nova Bay, in the vicinity of the Italian Mario Zucchelli Station. Measurement and analysis of radiation components, atmospheric constituents and energy fluxes, meteorological and micrometeorological parameters, will be implemented jointly by Korea Polar Research Institute (KOPRI), CNR and UNIFI, in a way similar to the collaboration already active in the Arctic. Such implementation will be very useful to close a gap in the global climate observation system (GCOS) and contribute to WMO programs providing scientific data and information on meteorological and radiation regimes, vertical structure and chemical composition of the atmosphere.
Simple
- Date (Creation)
- 2022-03-14
- Identifier
- https://antarcticdatacenter.cnr.it/geonetwork/srv/api/records/5c20ca64-f553-4aa4-b705-a498cb06c89d
- Purpose
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The proposed activities will contribute to specific YOPP objectives, such as: (i) Gather additional observations through field programmes aimed at improving understanding of key polar processes. (ii) Develop improved representation of key polar processes in uncoupled and coupled models used for prediction. The project results (data and parameterizations) will be of great importance to improve verification of polar weather and environmental predictions to obtain quantitative knowledge on model performance.
This project moves in the line of the desired cooperation with the Korean Polar Programme after opening of JBS. Reference are the framework agreement signed in 2010 between CSNA and KOPRI, and that signed between ISAC and KOPRI in 2014, also supported by MAE for the Arctic.
- Status
- Completed
- Maintenance and update frequency
- Irregular
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SCAR Gazetteer of Antarctica
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Terra Nova Bay
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Ross Sea
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GEMET - INSPIRE themes, version 1.0
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Atmospheric conditions
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GCMD - Science Keywords
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ATMOSPHERIC EMITTED RADIATION
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ATMOSPHERIC RADIATION
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INCOMING SOLAR RADIATION
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LONGWAVE RADIATION
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SOLAR RADIATION
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ATMOSPHERIC WINDS
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HUMIDITY
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ATMOSPHERIC PRESSURE
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ATMOSPHERIC STABILITY
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AEROSOLS
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PARTICLE COMPOSITION
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SHORTWAVE RADIATION
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AIR TEMPERATURE
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GCMD - Providers
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IT/PNRA
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Initiative and Programs
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YOPP
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PNRA project
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SAMEECA PNRA16_00031
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- Use limitation
- CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
- Unique resource identifier
- NUMERO_SPEDIZIONE
- Association Type
- dependency
- Initiative Type
- Campaign
- Spatial representation type
- Text, table
- Denominator
- 1
- Metadata language
- English
- Character set
- UTF8
- Topic category
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- Climatology, meteorology, atmosphere
- Unique resource identifier
- WGS84
- Distribution format
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FORMATO_DISTRIBUZIONE_DATI (ASCII, CSV, NetCDF...)
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1
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FORMATO_DISTRIBUZIONE_DATI (ASCII, CSV, NetCDF...)
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1
)
- OnLine resource
- SAMEECA - PNRA Project ( WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link )
- Hierarchy level
- Dataset
Domain consistency
Conformance result
- Date (Publication)
- 2010-12-08
- Explanation
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This data set is conformant with the INSPIRE Implementing Rules for the interoperability of spatial data sets and services
- Pass
- Yes
- Statement
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General information about the data origin and how it gets transformed along the way from the instrument to the database.
- File identifier
- 5c20ca64-f553-4aa4-b705-a498cb06c89d XML
- Metadata language
- English
- Character set
- UTF8
- Hierarchy level
- Dataset
- Date stamp
- 2024-10-04T12:46:15
- Metadata standard name
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ISO 19139
- Metadata standard version
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1.0