Caroline Leck, Patricia Matrai, Peggy Achtert, Michael Adams, Andrea Baccarini, Barbara Brooks, Ian Brooks, Rachel Chang, Lubna Dada, Kaspar Dällenbach, Giacomo DiTullio, Josef Dommen, Patrick Duplessis, Ulrike Egerer, Matthias Gottschalk, Benjamin Heutte, Luisa Ickes, Linn Karlsson, Rachel Kirpes, Michael Lawler, Richard Leaitch, Peter Lee, Axel Meiton, Jessica Mirrielees, Claudia Mohr, Benjamin Murray, Ryan Neely III, Emmy Nilsson, Grace Porter, Kerri Pratt, John Prytherch, Matthew Salter, Eric Saltzman, Nicole Schanke, Julia Schmale, Karolina Siegel, Birgitta Svenningsson, Michael Tjernström, Armando Vilchez, Jutta Vüllers, Heini Wernli, Michael Wheeler, Paul Zieger, Julika Zinke
The Arctic Ocean 2018 expedition was carried out during summer 2018 in the central Arctic Ocean.
With the Swedish icebreaker Oden serving as the research platform, a range of scientific investigations were made, including the microbiological life in the ocean and ice and how it's connected to cloud formation in the Arctic. Oden was mainly drifting with the pack ice to collect undesturbed air measurements. Data provided in the database here comprise weather station data, aerosol physical and chemical properties, atmospheric gas data, cloud and fog properties, micrometeorology, boundary meteorology, air trajectories, ocean biology and chemistry data and high-resolution bathymetry.
The expedition is also referred to as MOCCHA-ACAS-ICE. The expedition started and ended in Tromsø, Norway, and lasted from July 31 to September 25, 2018.
Datasets
Meteorology
Weather station and ship log
Aerosol chemical properties
Aerosol physical properties
Atmospheric gas phase data
Cloud and fog biology and chemistry
Cloud and fog physics
Cloud-base height
Micrometeorology
Pollution record
Radiosoundings
Remote sensing of clouds and fogs
Tethered sonde profiles
Trajectories
Oceanography
Ocean biology and chemistry
Marine geology
Bathymetry
Map
Citation
Caroline Leck, Patricia Matrai, Peggy Achtert, Michael Adams, Andrea Baccarini, Barbara Brooks, Ian Brooks, Rachel Chang, Lubna Dada, Kaspar Dällenbach, Giacomo DiTullio, Josef Dommen, Patrick Duplessis, Ulrike Egerer, Matthias Gottschalk, Benjamin Heutte, Luisa Ickes, Linn Karlsson, Rachel Kirpes, Michael Lawler, Richard Leaitch, Peter Lee, Axel Meiton, Jessica Mirrielees, Claudia Mohr, Benjamin Murray, Ryan Neely III, Emmy Nilsson, Grace Porter, Kerri Pratt, John Prytherch, Matthew Salter, Eric Saltzman, Nicole Schanke, Julia Schmale, Karolina Siegel, Birgitta Svenningsson, Michael Tjernström, Armando Vilchez, Jutta Vüllers, Heini Wernli, Michael Wheeler, Paul Zieger, Julika Zinke (2024) Data from expedition Arctic Ocean, 2018. Dataset version 4. Bolin Centre Database. https://doi.org/10.17043/oden-ao-2018-expedition-4
References
Leck C, Matrai P, Perttu A-M, Gårdfeldt K (2019) Expedition report: SWEDARTIC Arctic Ocean 2018, Swedish Polar Research Secretariat, 90 pp, ISBN 978-91-519-3671-0
Baccarini A, Karlsson L, Dommen J, Duplessis P, Vüllers J, Brooks IM, Saiz-Lopez A, Salter M, Tjernström M, Baltensperger U, Zieger P, Schmale J (2020) Frequent new particle formation over the high Arctic pack ice by enhanced iodine emissions. Nature Communications 11:4924. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-020-18551-0
Prytherch J, Yelland MJ (2021) Wind, convection and fetch dependence of gas transfer velocity in an Arctic sea‐ice lead determined from eddy covariance CO₂ flux measurements. Global Biogeochemical Cycles, 35, e2020GB006633. https://doi.org/10.1029/2020GB006633
Tjernström M, Svensson G, Magnusson L, Brooks IM, Prytherch J, Vüllers J, Young G (2021) Central Arctic weather forecasting: Confronting the ECMWF IFS with observations from the Arctic Ocean 2018 expedition. Q J R Meteorol Soc. 147:12781 – 1299. https://doi.org/10.1002/qj.3971
Vüllers J, Achtert P, Brooks IM, Tjernström M, Prytherch J, Burzik A, Neely III R (2021) Meteorological and cloud conditions during the Arctic Ocean 2018 expedition. Atmos Chem Phys 21:289 – 314. https://doi.org/10.5194/acp-21-289-2021
Zinke J, Salter ME, Leck C, Lawler MJ, Porter GCE, Adams MP, Brooks IM, Murray BJ, Zieger P (2021) The development of a miniaturised balloon-borne cloud water sampler and its first deployment in the high Arctic. Tellus B: Chemical and Physical Meteorology 73:1, 1 – 12. https://doi.org/10.1080/16000889.2021.1915614
Comments
Arctic Ocean 2018 (AO2018) was a scientific expedition to the high Arctic in summer 2018 and was deployed on the Swedish icebreaker Oden. AO2018 received scientific support from three complimentary programs: MOCCHA (Microbiology-Ocean-Cloud-Coupling in the High Arctic), ACAS (Arctic Climate Across Scales), and ICE (International Cooperative Effort, on ice work). The frame setting goal of AO2018 was to increase our knowledge of low- altitude clouds over the central Arctic Ocean by studying processes that are important to their formation and occurrence. This was achieved through highly interdisciplinary studies in which cloud formation was linked to the microbiological life in the ocean and ice, by means of detailed observations made from several hundred metres below the ocean’s surface to many kilometres up in the atmosphere:
- physical, chemical and biological characterization of the ocean and ice
- measuring exchange processes at the ocean-air interface
- sampling gases and aerosol particles and cloud/fog in the atmosphere
- measuring meteorological processes in the lowest layer of the atmosphere
AO2018 was the fifth research expedition to the central Arctic Ocean to support research on processes that are important for the formation and life cycle of low-altitude clouds over the pack ice: the earlier expeditions took place in 1991, 1996, 2001 and 2008. Access to the icebreaker Oden as a research platform, combined with the logistics support provided by the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat and Oden’s crew, offered the researchers a unique opportunity to conduct advanced and innovative research in a highly inaccessible region with limited influences by human activities.
The expedition was made in collaboration between Sweden and the US National Science Foundation (NSF).
How to cite
Please, cite each individual dataset whenever they are used or cite this collection when that is more relevant.
Participants
Co-chief scientists
- Caroline Leck, Department of Meteorology, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Patricia Matrai, Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, USA
Onboard Oden
- Katarina Abrahamsson, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- Michael Adams, University of Leeds, UK
- Karin Alfredsson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Philipp Anhaus, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany
- Andrea Baccarini, Paul Scherrer Institute, Switzerland
- Francesco Bolinesi, University of Napoli, Italy
- Ian Brooks, University of Leeds, UK
- Alister Cumming, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Helen Czerski, University College London, UK
- Giacomo DiTullio, College of Charleston, USA
- Adela Dumitrascu, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- Patrick Duplessis, Dalhousie University, Canada
- Matthias Gottschalk, University of Leipzig, Germany
- Michaela Haack, University of Oldenburg, Germany
- Mario Hoppmann, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany
- Luisa Ickes, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Linn Karlsson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Christian Katlein, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany
- Rachel Kirpes, University of Michigan, USA
- Matthieu Labaste, UPMC-LOCEAN, France
- Michael Lawler, University of California, USA
- Andrew Margolin, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, USA
- Grace Porter, University of Leeds, UK
- John Prytherch, Stockholm University, Stockholm
- Carlton Rauschenberg, Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, USA
- Allison Remenapp, Villanova University, USA
- Brandy Robinson, University of Oldenburg, Germany
- Matthew Salter, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Nicole Schanke, College of Charleston, USA
- Julia Schmale, Paul Scherrer Institute, Switzerland
- Karolina Seigl, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Gordon Showalter, University of Washington, USA
- Walker Smith, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, USA
- Peggy Tesche-Achtert, University of Reading, UK
- Michael Tjernström, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Anders Torstensson, University of Washington, USA
- Alexandra Walsh, University of Gothenburg, Sweden
- Paul Zieger, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Julika Zinke, Stockholm University, Sweden
On land
- Andrew Ault, University of Michigan, USA
- Vanessa Boschi, Villanova University, USA
- Rodrigo Caballero, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Shelly Carpenter, University of Washington, USA
- Rachel Chang, Dalhousie University, Canada
- Patrick Crill, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Jody Deming, University of Washington, USA
- Joachim Dillner, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Annica Ekman, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Amanda Grannas, Villanova University, USA
- Steve Gunn, University of Southampton, UK
- Savannah Haas, Villanova University, USA
- Hans-Christen Hansson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Leopold Ilag, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Radovan Krejci, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Richard Leaitch, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada
- Olivia de Meo, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, USA
- Ryan Neely III, University of Leeds, UK
- Marcel Nicolaus, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany
- Emmy Nilssen, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Johan Nilsson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Paul Poli, E-SURFMAR/Météo France, France
- Kerri Pratt, University of Michigan, USA
- Christine Provost, LOCEAN, France
- Benjamin Rabe, Alfred Wegener Institute, Germany
- Liam Reeves, Villanova University, USA
- Ilona Riipinen, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Eric Saltzman, University of California, Irvine, USA
- Elizabeth Shadwick, Virginia Institute of Marine Science, USA
- Birgitta Svenningsson, Lund University, Sweden
- Gunilla Svensson, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Erik Swietlicki, Lund University, Sweden
- Brett Thornton, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Jutta Vüllers, University of Leeds, UK
- Nils Walberg, Stockholm University, Sweden
- Michael Wheeler, Environment and Climate Change Canada, Canada
- Oliver Wurl, University of Oldenburg, Germany
- Gillian Young, University of Leeds, UK
Reports
See more information at the Swedish Polar Research Secretariat.
Version history
Version 4
45 datasets.
Version 3
38 datasets.
Version 2
34 datasets.
Version 1
Initial release. 28 datasets.