ABSTRACT:
A balloon-borne instrument was constructed for
observations of vertical profiles of cloud condensation nucleus (CCN) concentrations,
active at 1% supersaturation. Droplet concentration in the static thermal-gradient
diffusion chamber is deduced from the amount of scattered laser light detected
by a photodetector. The photodetector is calibrated using a video camera
and computer system to count the number of droplets produced from NaCl
aerosol. Preliminary data are available from nine early morning profiles
obtained at Laramie, Wyoming, between June 1995 and January 1997. To complement
the CCN measurements, instruments that measure condensation nuclei (CN)
and aerosols with diameter greater than 0.30 um (D0.3) were also included
on the balloon package. CCN concentrations exhibited a general decrease
from the surface to the top of the boundary layers, were generally uniform
through well-mixed layers, and show variability above well-mixed layers.
In general, the structure of the CCN profile appears to be closely related
to the structure in the CN and D0.3 profiles. Summer profiles generally
have CCN concentration greater than 200 cm-3 up to 500 mbar, whereas winter
profiles are less than 200 cm-3 at all levels.