HALO Scientific scope
HALO in the haze after landing in SAL
photo taken during PERCUSION | credit: A. Minikin (DLR)
HALO on the way to the stratosphere
credit: DLR-FX
HALO probing emissions
photo taken during CoMet 2.0 | credit: A. Minikin (DLR)
HALO in front of cirrus clouds forming a halo
photo taken during HALO-(AC)3 | credit: M. Schaefer (U. Leipzig)
HALO flying over the amazon
photo taken during CAFE-Brazil | credit: Thomas Sprünken (DLR-FX).
HALO flying into clouds
credit: DLR-FX
HALO advancing atmospheric research
The HALO aircraft represents a major improvement in the airborne research capability for research institutes and universities to study atmospheric phenomena and their interactions from local to global scales. Aircraft measurements are particularly valuable to describe processes at the scales of transport and photochemistry. The observed spatial variability in clouds, aerosols, water vapour and ozone, for example, ranges from less than 100 m (turbulence) to more than 1000 km (synoptic weather systems). Since oxidation processes in the atmosphere proceed through radical reaction chains, chemical measurements must typically be performed at a time resolution of seconds to minutes. Because of its relatively large size, HALO will facilitate the deployment of comprehensive sets of instrumentation, as developed within Germany or elsewhere, to simultaneously measure physical and chemical parameters to characterise transport, radiation and chemical processes. Furthermore, the long range and high altitude performance greatly increases the fraction of the global atmosphere in which fundamental physical and chemical processes can be directly observed.
Intensive field measurement campaigns that involve a large number of institutions and universities are conducted. The aim is to reduce uncertainties in the understanding of crucial atmospheric processes, in particular:
- The influence of aerosol particles on cloud microphysical and radiation processes
- The role of vertical exchange processes within the troposphere and between the troposphere and stratosphere
- The chemistry of the upper troposphere and lower stratosphere, and the influence of aircraft emissions
- The role of cirrus clouds (and aircraft condensation trails) in radiation transfer, climate and atmospheric chemistry
- Oxidation and aerosol physical-chemical processes in the tropical troposphere
- Long-range transport of pollutants that affect regional and global air quality and climate
Priority Areas for HALO scientific activities
Find more information on the five priority areas for HALO activities, as defined by the HALO consortium:
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Sources, Properties and Processing of Aerosol Particles
click for more details
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Formation, Evolution, and Radiative Effects of Clouds and Precipitation
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Transport and Dynamics in the Troposphere and Lower Stratosphere
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Transport and Transformation of Chemical Composition
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Atmospheric Coupling Processes
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Find more information on HALO’s contribution to science:
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HALO missions
Click for information on past, current, and planned HALO deployments
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HALO instrumentation
Click to find out what instruments can be installed on HALO
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Publications
Clickhere to find an overview of HALO-related publictions