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Creators/Authors contains: "Carmer, Kelly"

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  1. Abstract An internationally collaborative airborne campaign in July 2023 – led by the University of Bergen (Norway) and NASA, with contributions from many other institutions – discovered that thunderstorms near Florida and Central America produce gamma rays far more frequently than previously thought. The campaign was called Airborne Lightning Observatory for Fly’s Eye Geostationary Lightning Mapper (GLM) Simulator (FEGS) and Terrestrial Gamma-ray Flashes (TGFs), which shortens to ALOFT. The campaign employed a unique sampling strategy with NASA’s high-altitude ER-2 aircraft, equipped with gamma-ray and lightning sensors, flying near ground-based lightning sensors. Realtime updates from instruments, downlinked to mission scientists on the ground, enabled immediate return to thunderstorm cells found to be producing gamma rays. This maximized the observations of radiation created by strong electric fields in clouds, and showed how gamma-ray production may be physically linked to thunderstorm lifecycle. ALOFT also sampled storms entirely within the stereo-viewing region of the GLM instruments on GOES-16/18 and performed multiple underflights of the International Space Station Lightning Imaging Sensor (ISS LIS), while using an upgraded FEGS instrument that demonstrated the operational value of observing multiple wavelengths (including ultraviolet) with future spaceborne lightning mappers. In addition, a robust complement of airborne active and passive microwave sensors – including X- and W-band Doppler radars, as well as radiometers spanning 10-684 GHz – sampled some of the most intense convection ever overflown by the ER-2. These observations will benefit planned convection-focused NASA spaceborne missions. ALOFT is an exemplar of a high-risk, high-reward field campaign that achieved results far beyond original expectations. 
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    Free, publicly-accessible full text available May 5, 2026
  2. Abstract An investigation of lake effect (LE) and the associated synoptic environment is presented for days when all five lakes in the Great Lakes (GL) region had LE bands [five-lake days (5LDs)]. The study utilized an expanded database of observed LE clouds over the GL during 25 cold seasons (October–March) from 1997/98 to 2021/22. LE bands occurred on 2870 days (64% of all cold-season days). Nearly a third of all LE bands occurred during 5LDs, although 5LDs consisted of just 17.1% of LE days. A majority of 5LDs (56.5%) had lake-to-lake (L2L) bands, and these days comprised 43.5% of all L2L occurrences. 5LDs occurred with a mean of 26.1 (SD = 6.2) days per cold season until 2008/09 and then decreased to a mean of 13.8 (SD = 5.5) days during subsequent cold seasons. January and February had the largest number of consecutive LE days in the GL with a mean of 5.7 and 5.4 days, respectively. As the number of consecutive LE days increases, both the number of 5LDs and the occurrence of consecutive 5LD increase. This translates to an increased potential of heavy snowfall impacts in multiple, localized areas of the GL for extended time periods. The mean composite synoptic pattern of 5LDs exhibited characteristics consistent with lake-aggregate disturbances and showed similarity to synoptic patterns favorable for LE over one or two of the GL found by previous studies. The results demonstrate that several additional areas of the GL are often experiencing LE bands when a localized area has active LE bands occurring. 
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  3. The Laurentian Great Lakes have substantial influences on regional climatology, particularly with impactful lake-effect snow events. This study examines the snowfall, cloud-inferred snow band morphology, and environment of lake-effect snow days along the southern shore of Lake Michigan for the 1997–2017 period. Suitable days for study were identified based on the presence of lake-effect clouds assessed in a previous study and extended through 2017, combined with an independent classification of likely lake-effect snow days based on independent snowfall data and weather map assessments. The primary goals are to identify lake-effect snow days and evaluate the snowfall distribution and modes of variability, the sensitivity to thermodynamic and flow characteristics within the upstream sounding at Green Bay, WI, and the influences of snowband morphology. Over 300 lake-effect days are identified during the study period, with peak mean snowfall within the lake belt extending from southwest Michigan to northern Indiana. Although multiple lake-effect morphological types are often observed on the same day, the most common snow band morphology is wind parallel bands. Relative to days with wind parallel bands, the shoreline band morphology is more common with a reduced lower-tropospheric zonal wind component within the upstream sounding at Green Bay, WI, as well as higher sea-level pressure and 500-hPa geopotential height anomalies to the north of the Great Lakes. Snowfall is sensitive to band morphology, with higher snowfall for shoreline band structures than for wind parallel bands, especially due south of Lake Michigan. Snowfall is also sensitive to thermodynamic and flow properties, with a greater sensitivity to temperature in southwest Michigan and to flow properties in northwest Indiana. 
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