A technique for collecting aerosol particles between altitudes of 17 and 85 km is described. Spin-stabilized collection probes are ejected from a sounding rocket allowing for multi-point measurements. Each probe is equipped with 110 collection samples that are 3mm in diameter. The collection samples are one of three types: standard transmission electron microscopy carbon grids, glass fibre filter paper or silicone gel. Collection samples are exposed over a 50m to 5 km height range with a total of 45 separate ranges. Post-flight electron microscopy will give size-resolved information on particle number, shape and elemental composition. Each collection probe is equipped with a suite of sensors to capture the probe's status during the fall. Parachute recovery systems along with GPS-based localization will ensure that each probe can be located and recovered for post-flight analysis. © Author(s) 2013.
CITATION STYLE
Reid, W., Achtert, P., Ivchenko, N., Magnusson, P., Kuremyr, T., Shepenkov, V., & Tibert, G. (2013). Technical note: A novel rocket-based in situ collection technique for mesospheric and stratospheric aerosol particles. Atmospheric Measurement Techniques, 6(3), 777–785. https://doi.org/10.5194/amt-6-777-2013
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