A photo taken on a clear day, April 6, 2013, from the top of the Boulder Atmospheric Observatory. Credit: Aleya Kaushik
University of Colorado meteorologist David Noone and his team are working to understand how water moves around the planet. With support from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the project team observes and analyzes the stable isotope composition of water vapor and precipitation, primarily at the 300-meter (984-foot) Boulder Atmospheric Observatory tower.
The measurements are made using an optical measurement technology which has only recently become available, and which allows continuous in situ observations to be made on a practical basis. The ratio of heavier to lighter isotopes in water vapor contains information including the source region for the water vapor that falls as rain, which can be used to determine the extent to which rainwater comes directly from the ocean or from evaporation and plant transpiration over land.
The HIAPER Pole-to-Pole Observation (HIPPO) project has generated the first detailed mapping--both vertically and across latitudes--of the global distribution of greenhouse gases, black carbon and related chemical species in the atmosphere. Credit: Animations courtesy of R. Bradley Pierce, NOAA/NESDIS/STAR
Provided by National Science Foundation