NOAA Portable Cloud Observatory (NPCO)

NPCO deployed in Florida for CRYSTAL-FACE.  The white seatainer contains the MMCR radar, data systems and instrument control computers.  The MMCR antenna is the drum visible on top.  The fenced pen in the foreground contains the radiometers.
MMCR deployed in Florida for CRYSTAL-FACE.

Clouds have profound effects on climate and climate change through their ability to alter radiant energy and convert water between vapor, liquid, and ice phases. As such, an improved knowledge of cloud structure and processes is vital to understanding the potential reactions of climate to various influences, including greenhouse warming.

The NPCO combines active and passive remote sensors in an integrated cloud-profiling system housed in a single standard 20-foot sea container. Formerly called the MMCR Package, the NPCO combines a super-sensitivity, high-resolution cloud radar with microwave in infrared radiometers to provide, continuous, unattended measurements of the properties of clouds overhead. In the future, dual-polarization lidar may be added to this system.

The NPCO's cloud radar is identical to those designed by ETL for the U.S. Department of Energy's Cloud and Radiation Testbed sites. The NPCO employs automated retrieval algorithms to provide continuous information on the vertical distribution of cloud hydrometeor types, liquid water content, ice mass content, mean droplet and crystal sizes, particle concentrations, and cloud kinematics. The system has operated for cloud research experiments on land and aboard research ships at sea.

Information about the instrumentation and applications is available in the short article: NOAA/ETL's Vertical-Profiling Cloud Radar and Radiometer Package. Images and plots of raw and retrieved cloud microphysical parameters can be viewed at: Fireface Data/