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  1. Abstract. Due to its remote location and extreme weather conditions, atmospheric in situmeasurements are rare in the Southern Ocean. As a result, aerosol–cloudinteractions in this region are poorly understood and remain a major source ofuncertainty in climate models. This, in turn, contributes substantially topersistent biases in climate model simulations such as the well-known positiveshortwave radiation bias at the surface, as well as biases in numericalweather prediction models and reanalyses. It has been shown in previousstudies that in situ and ground-based remote sensing measurements across theSouthern Ocean are critical for complementing satellite data sets due to theimportance of boundary layer and low-level cloud processes. These processesare poorly sampled by satellite-based measurements and are often obscured bymultiple overlying cloud layers. Satellite measurements also do not constrainthe aerosol–cloud processes very well with imprecise estimation of cloudcondensation nuclei. In this work, we present a comprehensive set of ship-basedaerosol and meteorological observations collected on the 6-weekSouthern Ocean Ross Sea Marine Ecosystem and Environment voyage(TAN1802) voyage of RV Tangaroa across the Southern Ocean, from Wellington, New Zealand, tothe Ross Sea, Antarctica. The voyage was carried out from 8 February to21 March 2018. Many distinct, but contemporaneous, data sets were collectedthroughout the voyage. The compiled data sets include measurements from arange of instruments, such as (i) meteorological conditions at the sea surfaceand profile measurements; (ii) the size and concentration of particles; (iii)trace gases dissolved in the ocean surface such as dimethyl sulfide andcarbonyl sulfide; (iv) and remotely sensed observations of low clouds. Here,we describe the voyage, the instruments, and data processing, and provide a briefoverview of some of the data products available. We encourage the scientificcommunity to use these measurements for further analysis and model evaluationstudies, in particular, for studies of Southern Ocean clouds, aerosol, andtheir interaction. The data sets presented in this study are publiclyavailable at https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.4060237 (Kremser et al., 2020). 
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